Home > The Joy Luck Club Summary & Study Guide
The Joy Luck Club | Introduction
The Joy Luck Club, published by G. P. Putnam's Sons in 1989, presents the stories of four Chinese-immigrant women and their American-born daughters. Each of the four Chinese women has her own view of the world based on her experiences in China and wants to share that vision with her daughter. The daughters try to understand and appreciate their mothers' pasts, adapt to the American way of life, and win their mothers' acceptance. The book's name comes from the club formed in China by one of the mothers, Suyuan Woo, in order to lift her friends' spirits and distract them from their problems during the Japanese invasion. Suyuan continued the club when she came to the United States—hoping to bring luck to her family and friends and finding joy in that hope.
Amy Tan wrote The Joy Luck Club to try to understand her own relationship with her mother. Tan's Chinese parents wanted Americanized children but expected them to think like Chinese. Tan found this particularly difficult as an adolescent. While the generational differences were like those experienced by other mothers and daughters, the cultural distinctions added another dimension. Thus, Tan wrote not only to sort out her cultural heritage but to learn how she and her mother could get along better.
Critics appreciate Tan's straightforward manner as well as the skill with which she talks about Chinese culture and mother/daughter relationships. Readers also love The Joy Luck Club: women of all ages identify with Tan's characters and their conflicts with their families, while men have an opportunity through this novel to better understand their own behaviors towards women. Any reader can appreciate Tan's humor, fairness, and objectivity.
The Joy Luck Club Summary
The novel contains four sections, each beginning with a vignette depicting a stage in the life cycle. The four stories in each section explore the relationship between the mothers and the daughters at the same stage.
One series of stories focuses on Suyuan Woo, who comes to America in 1947, having lost her family, including twin daughters, during war. She does not know her daughters were rescued. Now remarried, she settles in San Francisco, has a daughter, Jing-mei (June), and starts a Joy Luck Club similar to one in China with three other women. The four form strong friendships.
As she grows up, Jing-mei and her mother struggle to understand one another. They never completely resolve their differences, and Suyuan dies unexpectedly. At the next meeting of the Joy Luck Club, her mother’s friends tell Jing-mei that Suyuan’s twin daughters have been found. They give her a check so she can visit them. As the novel ends, she meets her sisters in Shanghai.
A second set of stories focuses on An-mei, who lives with her... » Complete The Joy Luck Club Summary
New in The Joy Luck Club Group 
Identify an example of symbolism in "Feathers From a Thousand Li Away".
Question asked by lian06 in The Joy Luck Club.
What lesson did the parable "Feathers of a Thousand Li Away" teach us?
Question asked by janrey05 in The Joy Luck Club.
Join eNotes
Over 3,500 study guides, question and answer forums, literature criticism, reference content, and much more!
Navigate
- The Joy Luck Club: Introduction
- The Joy Luck Club: Summary
- The Joy Luck Club: Overview
- The Joy Luck Club: Amy Tan Biography
-
The Joy Luck Club: Summary and Analysis
- Feathers from a Thousand Li Away, Vignette Summary and Analysis
- The Joy Luck Club Summary and Analysis
- Scar Summary and Analysis
- The Red Candle Summary and Analysis
- The Moon Lady Summary and Analysis
- The Twenty-Six Malignant Gates, Vignette Summary and Analysis
- Rules of the Game Summary and Analysis
- The Voice from the Wall Summary and Analysis
- Half and Half Summary and Analysis
- Two Kinds Summary and Analysis
- American Translation, Vignette Summary and Analysis
- Rice Husband Summary and Analysis
- Four Directions Summary and Analysis
- Without Wood Summary and Analysis
- Best Quality Summary and Analysis
- Queen Mother of the Western Skies, Vignette Summary and Analysis
- Magpies Summary and Analysis
- Waiting Between the Trees Summary and Analysis
- Double Face Summary and Analysis
- A Pair of Tickets Summary and Analysis
-
The Joy Luck Club: Quizzes
- Feathers from a Thousand Li Away, Vignette Questions and Answers
- The Joy Luck Club Questions and Answers
- Scar Questions and Answers
- The Red Candle Questions and Answers
- The Moon Lady Questions and Answers
- The Twenty-Six Malignant Gates, Vignette Questions and Answers
- Rules of the Game Questions and Answers
- The Voice from the Wall Questions and Answers
- Half and Half Questions and Answers
- Two Kinds Questions and Answers
- American Translation, Vignette Questions and Answers
- Rice Husband Questions and Answers
- Four Directions Questions and Answers
- Without Wood Questions and Answers
- Best Quality Questions and Answers
- Queen Mother of the Western Skies, Vignette Questions and Answers
- Magpies Questions and Answers
- Waiting Between the Trees Questions and Answers
- Double Face Questions and Answers
- A Pair of Tickets Questions and Answers
- The Joy Luck Club: Themes
- The Joy Luck Club: Historical Context
- The Joy Luck Club: Critical Overview
- The Joy Luck Club: Character Analysis
- The Joy Luck Club: Essays and Criticism
- The Joy Luck Club: Suggested Essay Topics
- The Joy Luck Club: Sample Essay Outlines
- The Joy Luck Club: Compare and Contrast
- The Joy Luck Club: Topics for Further Study
- The Joy Luck Club: Media Adaptations
- The Joy Luck Club: What Do I Read Next?
- The Joy Luck Club: Bibliography and Further Reading
- The Joy Luck Club: Pictures
- Copyright
Tell a friend about The Joy Luck Club at eNotes.
