Pair Of Tickets Essays

  • A Pair Of Tickets

    1395 Words  | 3 Pages

    A Pair of Tickets This story is about a young Lady that lives in California with her mother and Father. She is however Chinese, and refuses to believe she is. This story is both a mystery and a suspense with in a way a tragically happy ending. By the end of this paper I will show how I come to this conclusion. First I will tell the story in my own words in a shorter version. The lady telling this story is in her thirties. Both her parents are from China, her mother left China

  • Names in A Pair of Tickets

    1356 Words  | 3 Pages

    Names in "A Pair of Tickets" In Amy Tan's "A Pair of Tickets" (the last chapter of The Joy Luck Club), the understanding of the importance of names is the key to truly apprehend a sacred relationship between mother ("Suyuen") and daughters (June or "Jing-Mei", "Chwun Yu" and "Chwun Hwa"). To understand the story as a whole, it is necessary for us to know the meanings of their names. The mother and daughters' names each bears its individual meaning, but all these names are indeed "intertwined"

  • Women in Management of Grief and A Pair of Tickets

    897 Words  | 2 Pages

    Women in Management of Grief and A Pair of Tickets Both Management of Grief and A Pair of Tickets were written by women and about women. Authors were able to portray an image of women which differs from the traditional, stereotypical literary image of feeble and delicate creatures who needed to be cared for. Women in these stories were faced with horrible tragedies, but the determining element in their experience was not so much what happened to them but how they took it. After reading

  • Theme Of A Pair Of Tickets

    1019 Words  | 3 Pages

    “A Pair of Tickets” The struggle of self identity as she realized that all this while, her mother was right. Once you are born Chinese, you cannot help but feel and think Chinese. Amy Tan’s “A Pair of Tickets” presents an incredibly interesting perspective of a woman named Jing mei who is traveling through her native country of china, embarks on this journey of self-discovery to find her true chinese roots. The opening scene of "A Pair of Tickets" is an appropriate setting for Jing mei remark of

  • A Pair Of Tickets Essay

    1798 Words  | 4 Pages

    Returning Home: The Effects on Cultural Hybridity In “ A Pair of Tickets” by Amy Tan, Tan tells the story of a young Asian American woman, Jing-mei, who journeys to her mother’s homeland, China. Jing-mei goes to China to meet her deceased mother’s twins from her first marriage, who her mother had to abandon on a road as she was fleeing Kweilin. Jing-mei not only takes a journey through China. She also takes journey to find her own self. She begins her journey to find herself starting at her true

  • A Pair Of Tickets Analysis

    756 Words  | 2 Pages

    From Dreams and Wishes to Reality The passage “A Pair of Tickets” written by Amy Tan, presents the idea or theme of belonging somewhere. In this passage Jing-mei yearns to find the “Chinese side” of herself. She feels as if she has never had one or lost it along the way of her journey in life. However Jing-mei finds it on a trip to China she will never forget. Tan really emphasized how lost Jing Mei was in the beginning of this passage, a joyful tone was also emphasized in this passage. For

  • A Pair Of Tickets Summary

    842 Words  | 2 Pages

    “A Pair of Tickets”, a short story by Amy Tan, expresses the theme of self-development within the protagonist character, June May Woo. Along her journey, June may comes to realize that her Chinese heritage is very important to her family and that it should of equal importance in her life as well. While in China, visiting her family, June May understands that the lifestyle her Chinese family members live is not so different from the lifestyle she lives in San Francisco. It is essential for an individual

  • A Pair Of Tickets Short Story

    591 Words  | 2 Pages

    and circumstances in which a tale, play, or movie takes place. Amy Tan’s “A Pair of Tickets”, this short story is about her journey to China to explore her identity and self-awareness. As the narrator, Amy Tan presents a story about a young Chinese-American student, June May, the protagonist. June began her journey with her father to China with the purpose of meeting her half-sisters for the first time. “A Pair of Tickets” has two main settings: San Francisco, USA and Guangzhou, China. In this story

  • A Pair of Tickets by Amy Tan

    1117 Words  | 3 Pages

    "A Pair of Tickets" by Amy Tan In the story "A Pair of Tickets," by Amy Tan, a woman by the name of Jing-mei struggles with her identity as a Chinese female. Throughout her childhood, she "vigorously denied" (857) that she had any Chinese under her skin. Then her mother dies when Jing-Mei is in her 30's, and only three months after her father receives a letter from her twin daughters, Jing-Mei's half sisters. It is when Jing-mei hears her sisters are alive, that she and her dad take a trip overseas

  • Amy Tan A Pair Of Tickets

    2036 Words  | 5 Pages

    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

  • A Pair of Tickets Amy Tan

    1130 Words  | 3 Pages

    A Pair of Tickets Amy Tan Amy Tan’s A Pair Of Tickets is a story concerning family and roots. June May, like the author herself, was a Chinese born in USA and grew up with an American background culture, whereas her mother grew up in China and then immigrated to America. Looking at the repeated words, we discussed that one there are many words such as mother, sister, father and Aiyi. Most of the characters in this story belong to one family, June May’s family. It suggests to us that the tale is

  • A Pair Of Tickets Short Story

    802 Words  | 2 Pages

    “A pair of tickets” is a narration by Jing Mei in which she and her dad head back to china to reunite with her long lost sisters who are twins. In the course of the story, insight regarding the background of the story is conveyed. This includes the revelation as to why Jing Mei’s mother leaves her twins. The insight also projects the life of the twins after their adoption as well as the life of their mother in America. Sunayun starts the search for her children but fails. She then proceeds and marries

  • A Pair of Tickets by Amy Tan

    1674 Words  | 4 Pages

    theme that finding the balance between heritage and culture is not always easy. This is seen through Amy Tan’s own life experience and through a couple of the many short stories she has written, for example, “Two Kinds”, “Rice Husband”, and “A Pair of Tickets”. In the following short stories, the daughter becomes everything the mother wished for, but meanwhile, the daughter becomes more American like and loses her Chinese values. Due to this fact, the mother and daughter find it hard to communicate

  • Amy Tan's A Pair Of Tickets

    655 Words  | 2 Pages

    The story, “A Pair of Tickets”, written by Amy Tan, is about Tan’s trip to China to discover her self-identity. The setting plays an important role in this story for this story because she realize that a large portion of her family history is in China. Through the story, while Tan is travelling through China to her final destination, she was reflecting how her mother’s past influence Tan’s present life. The story starts out when Tan is entering the Shezhen, China boarder and how she feels her cultural

  • Amy Tan A Pair Of Tickets

    944 Words  | 2 Pages

    In the short story “A Pair of Tickets” by Amy Tan, Jing-Mei Woo, who is a 36-year-old woman, is traveling to China with her father for the family reunion. When casually coming back motherland, she has learned the thorough story about her deceased mother. This encounter directly changes her comprehension forever. In my opinion, there are three reasons why she changed her mind about Suyuan in particular and her Chinese’s heritage in general, these are her self-reflection, the conversation between Canning

  • Suyuan's Letter

    667 Words  | 2 Pages

    On a train in China, June feels that her mother was right: she is becoming Chinese, even though she never thought there was anything Chinese about her. June is going with her father to visit his aunt, who he hasn't seen since he was ten. Then, in Shanghai, June will meet her mother's other daughters. When a letter from them had finally come, Suyuan was already dead--a blood vessel had burst in her brain. At first, Lindo and the others wrote a letter telling the other sisters that Suyuan was coming

  • Analysis of the poem Barbie Doll, by Marge Piercy

    1395 Words  | 3 Pages

    Barbie Doll’ written by Marge Piercy (1973) This girlchild was born as usual And presented dolls that did pee-pee And miniature GE stoves and irons And wee lipsticks the color of cherry candy. Then in the magic of puberty, a classmate said: You have a great big nose and fat legs. She was healthy, tested intelligent, Possessed strong arms and back, Abundant sexual drive and manual dexterity. She went to and fro apologizing. Everyone saw a fat nose on thick legs. She was advised to

  • Amy Tan A Pair Of Tickets Summary

    1352 Words  | 3 Pages

    “ A Pair of Tickets”, is about a father and daughter on a journey from America to China. The action from moving from America to China, also symbolizes the movement of Jing-Mei’s recognition of her identity as she shifts from her American culture to her new Chinese Culture that was already in her blood. Symbolism when you’re reading a story means a lot. Symbolism is shown in many different ways in “A Pair of Tickets”. The symbolism in this short story makes it

  • Theme Of A Pair Of Tickets By Amy Tan

    869 Words  | 2 Pages

    A Pair of Tickets by Amy Tan tells about a daughter, June-May, who travels to China to meet her twin sisters and announce the death of their mother. The issue at hand is that June-May has never been to China, nor has she ever met her twin sisters. June-May worries of not fitting in and standing out as an American is China. She has lived her life under the impression that nothing other than her parent’s origin makes her Chinese. This all changes once she is in China. It is in China that she begins

  • Amy Tan A Pair Of Tickets Analysis

    724 Words  | 2 Pages

    In todays world many parents and kids do not see eye to eye. There are many reason why this is so. This can be seen through Amy Tan’s, “A Pair of Tickets and Alice Walker’s “Everyday use”. Kids have conflicting thoughts with their parents because of age difference, lack of experience and worldly changes. Age difference is one of the main reasons parents and kids do not always agree on the matter at hand. A kid does not always understand why a parent may give them an answer that they do not understand