How The Garcia Girls Lost Their Accents: An Analysis

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Alone. Lost. Scared. Homesick. Shock. These are all emotions immigrants are stricken with when they arrive in their new country. Oftentimes, they have little-to-no earthly possessions. They are in an unfamiliar country and now have to try and fit in and assimilate to an entirely new culture. Some people may find it more difficult than others, but there is no doubt that the process is not easy. The Joy Luck Club, written by Amy Tan, explores the lives of a group of Chinese-American daughters and how they adjust to straddling the two worlds of the country they were born in and the family they were born into. Similarly, How the Garcia Girls Lost Their Accents, written by Julia Alvarez, tells the story of four girls who are uprooted from their home in the Dominican Republic and start new lives in …show more content…

All the daughters are born in the United States, so they grow up learning English in school with the other American children. They never have issues with feeling left out or difficulty fitting in due to not being able to speak English. However, there is a language barrier that exists between the daughters and their mothers. The daughters are often embarrassed at their mother’s lack of English and it also provides an additional barrier when they are trying to communicate to each other. Oftentimes, the daughters feel disconnected from the mothers because the mothers will use old Chinese expressions the daughters do not understand. Lena goes as far as to lie “when I [Lena] had to translate for her, the endless forms, instructions, notices from school, telephone calls” (Tan 106). The disconnect stretches to the point where June would talk to her mother in English and her mother would respond in Chinese. This language barrier inhibits the daughter’s relationship with their mother’s more than their ability to assimilate to American

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