Amy Tan A Pair Of Tickets

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Amy Tan “A Pair of Tickets” Amy Tan’s “A Pair of Tickets” follows a thirty-six year old woman named June May who has found herself lost from her own heritage and with loads of questions that were left without answers about her ancestry. According to “Explanation of Amy Tan’s A Pair of Tickets by Lit Finder Contemporary Collection” “this novel is a collection of sixteen interrelated stories centered on the diverse emotional relationships of four different mother-daughter pairs”. Growing and being raised in San Francisco California as a Chinese-American June May never believed or felt as if she were actually really Chinese even though her Mother was from China and had immigrated to the United States. Following the death of her mother June …show more content…

Tan expresses symbolism beginning with when the train takes off from Hong Kong. “The minute our train leaves the Hong Kong border and enters Shenzhen China, I feel different. I can feel the skin on my forehead tingling, my blood rushing through a new course, my bones aching with a familiar old pain” (Tan 263). The train leaving the Hong Kong border and entering this new un known part of China symbolizes a start of something new and un familiar for June May. The tingling of the skin on the forehead, blood rushing, and bones aching with a familiar pain symbolizes June May’s mothers spirit and as well the start of her transformation. Traveling is very symbolistic in this story for as June May would move on to a new location she would also change. As she moves into the city she notices a construction site and points out the lack of safety and equipment. “And then there is a building, its front laced with scaffolding made of bamboo poles held together with plastic wraps. Men and women are standing on narrow platforms, scrapping the sides, working without safety straps or helmets” (Tan 269). The author points out the construction site and it flaws to symbolize and compare and contrast June’s thoughts on American and Chinese culture still believing that in America it would have been better taken care of. As June approaches the hotel she is in confusion and awe not believing that a hotel could be so nice especially in China a country that was ran by communism. “The taxi stops and I assume we’ve arrived, but then I peer out at what looks like a grander version of the Hyatt Regency. This is communist China? I wondered out Loud” (Tan 269). June’s reaction to the beautiful hotel and believing that they were not at the right one symbolizes her starting to gradually begin to love China and realize her true identity. The Polaroid camera also signified Jing Mei change as she would take pictures she

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