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Garcia Girls and Elizabeth Wong The Statue of Liberty is an American icon because it symbolizes freedom, success, and the power of this nation. This image is what the U.S stands for to the outside world. Foreigners strive to move to America because of its wealth and acceptance towards all races and ethnicity. “How the Garcia Girls Lost Their Accents” recounts the story of how Carlos Garcia, Laura Garcia, and their four girls move from the Dominican Republic to the United States to escape a dictatorship, and establish a new life in flourishing New York City. Many unexpected culture shocks await them in their new country. Although the girls find it difficult to adapt at first, they soon begin to assimilate and Americanize. On the other hand, “The Struggle to Be an All-American Girl” by Elizabeth Wong illustrates the life of an Asian American having to embrace two entirely different cultural identities. Both the Garcia family and Elizabeth Wong's family have to deal with two opposing cultures without losing too much of their heritage. The book and the essay are similar in that characters in each story lose much of their original tradition. However, they are different in that the families move to the states for distinctive reasons, and the cultural preference of “The Struggle to Be an All-American Girl” is more evident than that of “How the Garcia Girls Lost Their Accents”. One striking similarity in the writings is that all characters lose their heritage over time. In “The Struggle to Be an All-American Girl”, Elizabeth was forced to attend Chinese school by her mother to retain her Chinese heritage and to speak proficient Chinese. However, she hated the Chinese School and strongly preferred speaking English over Chinese. She... ... middle of paper ... ...e Dominican Republic. Elizabeth is more innocent than the Garcia girls, because she never had to go through the assimilation troubles that the Garcia girls have to go through. For example, Elizabeth was never in desperate need to overcome a language barrier; her life can be well off by simply knowing English. Meanwhile, Carla is bullied at school because she speaks with an accent, and her English is not fluent. The Garcia girls have to learn most of their English from school because Spanish is the main language spoken at home. Both the Garcia girls and Elizabeth are strongly Americanized and lose much of their heritage at the end, but the Garcia girls are the ones who feel immigration’s negative impact on their life. Elizabeth can be much more optimistic about the U.S because she never had to got through the assimilation struggles that the Garcia girls went through.

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