Mother Tongue Essays

  • Amy Tan's Mother Tongue

    851 Words  | 2 Pages

    Amy Tan's Mother Tongue In Mother Tongue, Amy Tan talks about how language influenced her life while growing up. Through pathos she explains to her audience how her experiences with her mother and the Chinese language she came to realize who she wanted to be and how she wanted to write. The author, Tan, has written the books The Joy Luck Club, and The Kitchen God's Wife. She is Asian-American, her parents are originally from China, but moved to Oakland, California. The audience in Tan's

  • Amy Tan's Mother Tongue

    1115 Words  | 3 Pages

    Amy Tan's Mother Tongue The Essay written by Amy Tan titled 'Mother Tongue' concludes with her saying, 'I knew I had succeeded where I counted when my mother finished my book and gave her understandable verdict' (39). The essay focuses on the prejudices of Amy and her mother. All her life, Amy's mother has been looked down upon due to the fact that she did not speak proper English. Amy defends her mother's 'Broken' English by the fact that she is Chinese and that the 'Simple' English spoken

  • Amy Tan's Story Mother Tongue

    631 Words  | 2 Pages

    Amy Tan's Story Mother Tongue A good portion of Americans today speak English as their first language. However, what makes us different is that it is rare to find two people that speak the exact same English. This is the argument Amy Tan makes in her story “Mother Tongue”. A first-generation Asian American, Tan emigrated from China to Oakland, California, where she became a famous writer. She shares her personal story of the English she speaks, and how much the people you are around can change

  • Mother Tongue and Language Use in Family and Society

    1018 Words  | 3 Pages

    Mother Tongue and Language Use in Family and Society “Mother Tongue”, by Amy Tan and “Language Use in Family and Society”, by Lee Thomas and Linh Cao, are two examples of how language is important in communication, even if the members of the family may be speaking a language other than English. Language is important to these two authors and it is what brings each family member closer to another, however, they approach the language differently. For Tan and her mother, language is very special

  • Multiculturalism in Mother Tongue, Memorial Day and Multiculturalism, and College Writing

    1969 Words  | 4 Pages

    Multiculturalism in Mother Tongue, Memorial Day and Multiculturalism, and College Writing As an American it is very important to understand the different concepts of assimilation and multiculturalism. It is these terms that differ one person from everybody else in some kind of way. Multiculturalism is a term that is just what it sounds like. It is including several cultures. According to the American Heritage dictionary, multiculturalism is " a social or educational theory or program

  • Amy Tan's Mother Tongue and Jimmy Santiago Baca's Coming Into Language

    1017 Words  | 3 Pages

    Amy Tan's Mother Tongue and Jimmy Santiago Baca's Coming Into Language In the course of reading two separate texts it is generally possible to connect the two readings even if they do not necessarily seem to be trying to convey the same message. The two articles, “Mother Tongue” by Amy Tan, and “Coming Into Language” by Jimmy Santiago Baca, do have some very notable similarities. They are two articles from a section in a compilation about the construction of language. The fact that these

  • Summary Of Mother Tongue

    887 Words  | 2 Pages

    Mother Tongue by Amy Tan America is a melting pot; it is filled with people with different backgrounds. Many people settled here in America as an immigrant to have more opportunities to start a better life. Many people came here with nothing but their cultures, knowledge, beliefs and behaviors which they shared amongst others in society. In society, starting with the earlier generation there was shared culture of classes, although everyone portrays immigrants as the lowest class. They are always

  • Amy Tan Mother Tongue Essay

    846 Words  | 2 Pages

    Mothers tongue and two Kinds the essay “Mother Tongue” addresses characteristics of 1st and 2nd generation immigrants. Identify these characteristics. How are they represented in “Two Kinds”? In Amy Tan’s essay “Mother Tongue” she illustrates the characteristics of both first and second generation immigrants. Also, she uses her short story “Two Kinds” to represent these characteristics. First generation immigrants are the first of their family to move to the United States. Tan’s essay describes

  • Mother Tongue By Amy Tan Summary

    884 Words  | 2 Pages

    Mother Tongue by Amy Tan America is much diversified; it is filled with people with different backgrounds. Many people settled here in America as an immigrant to have more opportunities to start a better life. Many people came here with nothing but their cultures, knowledge, beliefs and behaviors which they shared amongst others in society. In society, starting with the earlier generation there was shared culture of classes, although everyone portrays immigrants as the lowest class. They are always

  • Mother Tongue

    799 Words  | 2 Pages

    multicultural people in the world today. For many, the choices of which language they use, and how they use it, correspond to what social or cultural community they belong to. Amy Tan, a Chinese American novelist, portrays this well in her short essay "Mother Tongue." Tan grew up in two vastly different worlds, using different "Englishes." The first world, which consists of her close family, she speaks what we may call "broken" or "limited" English. The second world, which is her business and professional

  • Sandra Cisneros 'Mother Tongue' By Amy Tan

    545 Words  | 2 Pages

    In the essay “Mother Tongue” by Amy Tan, she states that “ Recently, I was made keenly aware of the different Englishes I do use.” This wasn’t something I really thought pertained to me until I thought about it a little more. As I thought about it, it did I would change how I talked depending on who I was around or texting. As I read this essay I was thinking that this was more about someone who English is a second language, but it’s not we all have a different way of talking to certain people.

  • Differences Of Amy Tan's Mother Tongue And Mother Tongue

    1413 Words  | 3 Pages

    though people categorize others based solely from the way they speak, your language does not necessarily define who you are as a person. You have to learn to embrace your language and your ethnicity. In both of these essays, "Mother Tongue" by Amy Tan and "How to Tame a Wild Tongue" by Gloria Anzaldua, we learn that without our native language we would have a hard time embracing our ethnicity. First, both essays are written in first person perspectives by first generation of English speakers living

  • Mother Tongue Essay

    876 Words  | 2 Pages

    The mother tongue is regarded as a particular language learnt as you grow up, rather than a language learned at school or as an adult (Cambridge Dictionaries Online, 2013). The term mother tongue originates from conception that linguistic skills of a child are improved and shaped by the mother, but it does not mean that the language spoken by the mother would be the fundamental vernacular that the child would learn. In this essay I will argue that the mother tongue of the learners should not be the

  • Mother Tongue In Australia

    968 Words  | 2 Pages

    Economic benefits are in a way linked to social benefits, because speaking a mother tongue brings employment to aboriginal people and the work environment is favorable for encounters. One of the biggest social problems faced by Aboriginal people is certainly trying to keep the right to pursue traditional ways of life. However, a way to pursue traditional lifestyles is to maintain Aboriginal language and folklore. Once again, we see how crucial it is to sustain the language. It also has an importance

  • Mother Tongue Analysis

    1098 Words  | 3 Pages

    Life is tough when one doesn’t speak the native language or is new to a country. “Mother Tongue” by Amy Tan is a personal essay written in the first person point of view that tells the audience a story of a non-English speaker. Tan shares her story of how difficult it is for her mother to communicate with others. The presumption that people treat one another differently and with disrespect when one does not speak English is categorical truth. Tan’s purpose is to share her story and give the audiences

  • Importance Of Mother Tongue

    1439 Words  | 3 Pages

    Title The Role of Mother Tongue in Second Language Learning Preamble The process of learning and teaching is continuously affected by many different factors of different nature among which are learner characteristics, teacher characteristics, teaching materials, methods of teaching. One of the early recognized important factor is the mother tongue positive and negative interference in the learning process of the target language. In the heyday of structural linguistics and pattern practice language

  • Mother Tongue Interlanguage

    2078 Words  | 5 Pages

    It is an obvious notion that millions of people around the world can speak more than one language than their native tongue language. While some speakers are able to achieve a proficient fluency in their second target language (L2), others cannot do so. In more recent years, researcher’s level of interest has dramatically increased into why language learners have a problem being fluent in their second target language. They have suggested that there is a process in which one language can be interfere

  • Evaluating Mother Tongue

    1146 Words  | 3 Pages

    Evaluating “Mother of Tongue” Limited or broken English can affect a person’s ability to communicate or make it difficult for others people to understand him or her. In her article “Mother Tongue”, Amy Tan argues that the broken English, common in her households as well as other immigrant families did limit her powers in English. Tan purpose is to illustrate how speaking broken English does affect how people see you and limits people. Tan uses a humorous tone in order to attract readers with broken

  • Analysis Of Mother Tongue

    1459 Words  | 3 Pages

    knowing English when arriving to the United States. Tan wrote a story about her mother called “Mother Tongue” in which she describes her experience with her mother and

  • Analysis Of The Mother Tongue

    756 Words  | 2 Pages

    Summary and Critique: The Mother Tongue- English & How It Got That Way The author, Bill Bryson, briefly introduces and describes the history of English. In this book, The Mother Tongue, Bryson uses an interesting way and scholarly manner to guide readers through the various linguistic and social movements in the English language, the center of the world language as well as the export of manufactured goods. He gives different kinds of instances by comparing with various languages to present how the