Tuesday, April 30, 2019

Reading Notes A, Week 14, The Joy Luck Club


Magpies 215-241
An-Mei Hsu - Mother left, raised by grandmother, Uncle, Aunt, Grandmother died
Daughter- Rose Hsu Jordan (divorce from Ted)
Rose told her mother, An-Mei her marriage was falling apart, Rose did not speak to her mother about her issues, but would talk to a psychiatrist, with tears of shame.
“She cried, “No choice! No choice!” She does not know. If she doesn’t speak, she is making a choice. If she doesn’t try she can lose her chance forever. I know this, because I was raised the Chinese way: I was taught to desire nothing, to swallow other people’s misery, to eat my own bitterness. And even though I taught my daughter the opposite, still she came out the same way!”(215)
In this chapter An-Mei tells a story about when she made a choice to leave her uncles house and follow her mother. Her mother was happy as they traveled home but once they reached her home as the third wife of an older man, she changed. An-Mei learned that her mother had no power or respect as the third wife and she actually gave birth to a son that the first wife claimed as her own. The second wife pretended suicide so she was treated well. An-Mei’s mother could no longer handle the suffering she had so she poisioned herself with opium. “…she whispered to me that she would rather kill her own weak spirit so she could give me a stronger one.”(240)

Waiting Between the Trees
Ying-ying St. Clair – quiet, husband died.
Daughter - Lena St. Clair – unhappy marriage,  quite, nice house, split everything 50/50
“This is the guest bedroom,” Lena said in her proud American way. I smiled. But to Chinese ways of thinking, the guest bedroom is the best bedroom, where she and her husband sleep. I do not tell her this.” (242)                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                             

Monday, April 29, 2019

Project Planning #3, Week 13, The Joy Luck Club


For our third and final project, I will be using the free choice book, The Joy Luck Club, by Amy Tran. I really enjoyed this book and the contents. Below are the three choices that I will use to select my topic for my project.

Choice One - Think about a theme you see running through your life. Choose a reading that you think also discusses this theme. Explore connections between how the theme plays out in your life, and how the theme gets played out in the reading.
Theme - Life is not always what it seems
In the book, The Joy Luck Club, there are four mothers born and raised in China, and later immigrated to San Francisco with their husbands and had daughters. The book has stories from the mothers and daughters grew up and then talks about their relationships once the daughters became adults. The daughters views of what their mothers wanted for and from them are different than what the mothers want for their daughters and at the end of the book the daughters finally see what their mothers have been trying to show and tell them for all of their lives.

Choice Two – Choose a reading selection. Explore the relationship between elements of the selection.
How does setting influence character development – China vs San Francisco, California, US.
The four mothers were born and grew up in China, their daughters were born and grew up in San Francisco. The mothers wanted a different life for their children, but still tried to instill their cultural values in them. The mothers realized that although they wanted a better life for their children in America, it was very different then what they expected.

Choice Three – What does this work reflect about its historical, social, political and/or economic context? You may focus in race, class, power, cultural values and beliefs, historical events, etc)
Focus – Cultural values and beliefs -  The cultural values and belief were very different for the mothers and daughters in the book, The Joy Luck Club. Lindo Jong was raised to keep her families promise to marry the man she was promised to by the town matchmaker, she could not dishonor her family. Waverly Jong was her daughter, she did not think her mother would approve of her new boyfriend, she felt like she needed to trick her mom into inviting him over for dinner, after she felt defeated because the dinner did not go well. She later came to realize that her mother loved her no matter what and tired to find a balance and build a stronger, trusting relationship with her mother.

Monday, April 22, 2019

Reading Notes B, Week 13, The Joy Luck Club


The Voice from the Wall: Lena St. Clair daughter of Ying-ying St. Clair

Because, even as a young child, I could sense the unspoken terrors that surrounded out house, the ones that chased my mother until she hid in a secret dark corner of her mind. And still they found her. I watched, over the years, as they devoured her, piece by piece, until she disappeared and became a ghost. (103)
Lena was a very aware of her surroundings as a young child, because her mother, Ying-ying would tell her dark stories, such has how her grandfather sentenced a beggar to die and then he came back and killed her great grandfather a week later, there was a bad man who lived in the basement of their home. Lena started to see the bad around her and did not tell anyone. Ying-ying did not speak good English and her husband who was not Chinese, would try to say what she was thinking and speak for her. Ying-ying arrived in SF through Angel Island Immigration Station, which she stayed there for 3weeks, she was claimed as a Displaced Person, since they did not have rules for a Chinese wide of a Caucasian citizen. When Ying-ying and Lena were alone her mother would speak Chinese, and say that everything was danegerous. Lena’s father was promoted and they moved to a better area, up a hill in North Beach. Ying-ying was still not happy, did not feel like her home was balanced and started to move many things around in the apartment, food, furniture.
“When something goes against your nature, you are not in balance. This house was built too steep, and a bad wind from the top blows all your strength back down the hill. So you can never get ahead. You are always rolling backwards.” (109)
Ying-ying was pregnant and was nesting, but she did not take care of herself, she would bump into things and did not seem happy about being pregnant.
Lena’s bed was moved once the baby’s crib was in the room and she could hear a woman shouting at girl, she would hear yelling, pushing and hitting sounds, this would happen all of the time. Lena seen the girl in the stairs of the apartment but she would not look at Lena.
One day she was picked up from school from a family friend, who took her to the hospital, her mother lost the baby and was blaming herself. After this her mother was lost and slowly fell apart, piece by piece.
One night the neighbor girl who Lena could hear through the window came to her door, she came into the house and then started to go through Lena’s window back up to her room. Even though, her mother beat her, and treated her badly, she went back home and said her mom would be happy she returned. Later that night she heard, “you stupida girl. You almost gave me a heart attack……. Then I heard them laughing and crying, shouting with love.” (115)

Reading Notes A, Week 13, The Joy Luck Club


Rules of the Game: Waverly Jong daughter of Lindo Jong

I was six when my mother taught me the art of invisible strength. It was a strategy for winning arguments, respect for others, and eventually, though neither of us knew it at the time, chess games.(89)
At home, she said, “Wise guy, he not go again wind. In Chinese we say, Come from South, blow with wind-poom!- North will follow. Strongest wind cannot be seen.” (89)
“Some boy in my class said Chinese people do Chinese torture.” “Chinese people do many tings, she said simply. “Chinese people do business, do medicine, do painting. Not lazy like American people. We do torture. Best torture.” (91)

During an annual Christmas party help at the First Chinese Baptist Church near their home, her older brother, Vincent was given a chess set, Waverly got a 12 pack of Life Savers. Her older brothers played chess and she watched them and begged them to let her play, she used her Life Savers as replacements for the missing pieces they allowed her to play. Waverly studied and learned the rules for the game.
I loved the secrets I found within the sixty-four black and white squares. I carefully drew a handmade chessboard and pinned it to the wall next to my bed, where at night I would stare for hours at imaginary battles. Soon I no longer lost any games or Life Savers, but I lost my adversaries. (95)
Waverly found a man at the park to play, Lau Po, she played, learned a lot from him, and became an even better chest player.
Waverly started playing in local tournaments, and won trophy’s .
By my ninth birthday, I was a national chess champion. I was still some 429 points away from grand-master status, but I was touted as the Great American Hope, child prodigy and a girl to boot. (97)
Lindo was very proud of her daughter, Waverly, and bragged about her often to people, and she did not like that. One day she told her mom that she wished she did not do that, her and her mother argued and Waverly ran off, she was in the alley by her house. When she went home she though she would be in a lot of trouble, her parents did not yell at her, which made her unsure of the situation. She went to her room and thought about her mom and chess.

Weekly Review, Week 12


This last week I am feeling great. Honestly, I was nervous about having to read our free choice book because I was not sure if I would be able to complete the book, mostly because of the time it would require and normally I am not into reading that much and it is a struggle to sit and read a book. However, I started reading my first section on Sunday evening, and finished it by Tuesday evening. I felt great about it, enjoyed reading it and did not see it as a homework assignment; it was something I wanted to do when I had a few extra minutes. Wednesday I woke up with a swollen eye, was not able to go to work for two days, so I sat in my backyard, and finished the book by Thursday afternoon. This was some much-needed time to myself; I just sat, and read for a few hours each day. I was shocked that I had done this, never in my life have I read a book so fast. This was a great experience, to choose a book and enjoy it. I think the exercise we had to complete before we choose the book, really helped.

I think that I was able to enjoy the book because it was about Asian mothers, their daughters, and their stories. I have been getting into my culture lately and it really held my interest.

This week I will be completing my reading notes and analysis for the next two weeks, which also feels really good. This week is crazy at home and work, so not having to stress about completing the reading for this week, feels great.

I am so happy I took this class it has taught me so much about myself and what I can accomplish when I am focused and set my mind to it.

Friday, April 19, 2019

Close Reading, Week 12, The Joy Luck Club


“I once sacrificed my life to keep my parents’ promise.” (49)
This is a quote from, The Joy Luck Club, written by Amy Tran, the chapter was about one of the club members, Lindo Jong, and the title was The Red Candle. When Lindo Jong was 2 years old she was betrothed to a younger baby boy, Tyan-yu by the towns old village matchmaker. At the age of 12 years old her family had to move away because their family home was destroyed. Lindo Jong had to stay and was sent to live with the betrothed’s family. “But I could not stop my mother from giving me her chang, a necklace made out of a tablet of red jade. When she put it around my neck, she acted very stern, so I knew she was very sad. “Obey your family. Do not disgrace us.” She said. “Act happy when you arrive. Really, you’re very lucky.” (54) Throughout this chapter Lindo Jong is mistreated and is expected to learn all of the things she needs to know to be a good wife to her soon to be husband. Lindo Jong was not happy with her life and once she married Tyan-yu at the age of 16 years old, they acted happy infront of the family but slept separately at night in the same room. Tyan-yu was not happy and did not want to be with Lindo Jong, they never sleep with each other and were forced to after many months of her not being pregnant. Through the unhappiness Lindo Jong did not disobey her family, she acted as if she was happy and did everything she was told. She was able to use a dream and a young pregnant servant girl as her way to be released of her promise to Tyan-yu and at the same time she did not disobey her parents, however she did scarified her life for many years to keep her parents promise.
The literary devises used in this section of the story were flashback and imagery. Flashback was used to tell the story of her past and how she kept her parents promise. Imagery was used when she tricked the Tyan-yu’s mother and the matchmaker in thinking she had a dream and used facts she had seen to create a story that she was able to prove and use to show that she was not Tyan-yu’s spiritual wife. These literary devices were key to this part of the story and really give it meaning and kept me as the reader engaged.






Works Cited

Tran, Amy, “The Joy Luck Club.” Pp 49-66

Wednesday, April 17, 2019

Reading Notes B, Week 12, The Joy Luck Club

An-Mei Hsu - Was from China, as a young girl, she lived with her little brother, grandmother, Popo, aunt and uncle, in their home in Ningpo. Her father had passed away and was told that her mother was a ghost, it did not mean that her mother was dead. Her mother had left An-Mei and her brother after their father, her husband died. When An-Mei was 9 years old, in 1923, her grandmother became very sick. Popo would call An-Mei into her room and tell her stories that she did not understand. An-Mei was told never to speak her mothers name and if she did, it was like spitting on her fathers grave. The feeling of her home was unhappy, cold hallways and tall stairs. An-Mei's mother returned to help take care of Popo, An-Mei's aunt was upset and tried to get her to leave, but she stayed and took care of her mother Popo. Popo was very ill and did not realize it was An-Mei's mother caring for her or else she would have been upset. An-Mei, mother rubbed her fingers under her chin, where she had a scare. An-Mei had a memory of when she was 4 years old at the dinner table, An-Mei's mother came back for her and begged her to come to her but during the commotion of the uncle, aunt, and Popo arguing An-Mei was burned under her chin with soup. Ani-Mei learned to love her mother because of the way she took care of Popo, she even cut some of her flesh to mix in a soup to try to save her but Popo passed that night.

Lindo Jong sacrifieced her life to keep her parents promise. She was promised to a boy at the age of 2 by the village matchmaker. She continued to live with her parents until there was a heavy storm that flooded their home and her family was forced to move, but she had to stay and go to live with the family she was promised to at the age of 12. When her mother left she was told, "Obey your family. Do not disgrace us." (54) Lindo was treated like a servant in the home, she had to live on the same floor of the home with them and was taught daily how to care for her soon to be husband, Tyan-yu. When Lindo was 16 she was told that Tyan-yu's mother, Huang Taitai, she wanted a grandson. The couple was married soon after but on their wedding night, Tyan-yu made her sleep on the couch next to the bed and there she slept for a long time, until one night she was forced to sleep next to him, but Tyan-yu did not want to touch her, she realized that he was still a young child and was scared. She had to think of a way to make the family release her of her commitment with out disgracing her family. She found a way and was released and was free from the promise her family made so many years before and she did it without disgracing her family.

Ying-Ying St. Clair was not always a quite woman but became that way after the night of telling the Moon Lady her secret wish.

Tuesday, April 16, 2019

Reading Notes A, Week 12, The Joy Luck Club


The Joy Luck Club by Amy Tan
The Mothers                              The Daughters
Suyuan Woo                               Jing-mei “June” Woo (36YO)
An-mei Hsu                                 Rose Hsu Jordan
Lindo Jong                                   Waverly Jong
Ying-ying St. Clair                      Lena St. Clair

When Suyuan Woo was young, she was married to an officer, with two small children, people from many different lifestyles all fled to Kweilin to escape the Japanese. Suyuan Woo started the Joy Luck Club when she was in Kweilin. “My idea was to have a gathering of four woman, one for each corner of my mah jong table. I knew which woman I wanted to ask. They were all like me, with wishful faces.” (23) The woman would gather weekly, they took turns hosting the party, to raise money and their spirits. They would eat and play mah jong.
Suyuan Woo started the Joy Luck Club in San Francisco in 1949.
Suyuan Woo died and her daughter Jing-Mei Woo was asked by her father to sit in her mothers spot, at the fourth corner of the mah jong table.
Suyuan Woo would tell her daughter Jing-mei about her time in Kweilin, as Jing-mei grew older the story had different endings, until one day when it ended with her mother having to leave Kweilin with her two young children slinged to her, with a wheelbarrow to push any of her belongs that would fit, one of the items was her mah jong table. As she pushed toward Chungking to be with her 1st husband, she slowly started loosing her stuff, the wheel broke, she used slings and bags, but by the time she arrived at Chungking, she only had three fancy silk dresses that she was wearing. Suyuan Woo only said that the babies were not Jing-mei, but did not speak about them again.

Jing-mei’s father said that Suyuan Woo died she had a thought in her head but before it came out, it grew too big and busted. The doctors said she died of cerebral aneurysm.
Jing-mei played mah jong with her aunts and after a long time she tried to leave but before she could the aunts had to tell her something. They told her that her mothers children were alive in China and they were daughters. The aunts gave Jing-mei $1200 to go to China to meet her sisters.

Monday, April 15, 2019

Project 2 Revision, Week 11, In the Land of the Free


Lae Choo is a very strong woman and loves her son, Little One, more than anything in her life. 

Lae Choo, is a female from the passage, In the Land of the Free, by Edith Maud Easton. I will be focusing on her as a female character and creating a project that will show what the author’s and my attitude are towards her. The project will also discuss two other character’s views of Lae Choo. Lastly, the project will discuss how Lae Choo views herself and give quotes from the passage to support the different views.

In the passage, Lae Choo is a Chinese woman, who was married to her husband, Hom Hing, they lived in San Francisco together. Lae Choo, returned to China to give birth to their child, the Little One. Her husband, Hom Hing stayed in San Francisco and continued to work as a merchant, he owned a store and they lived above it. Lae Choo and her son had stayed in China longer than they expected because Hom Hing’s parents were ill and she needed to take care of them. Hom Hing had never met his son, who was 20 months old. Lae Choo and the Little One arrived under the Golden Gate bridge aboard, Easter Queen. On this day, Hom Hing met his son for the first time and as they were leaving the ship the family was stopped by two men with the initials U.S.C. on their caps. The Little One did not have any papers from Washington allowing him to enter and none of the papers regarding Lae Choo had mentioned anything about a child, because he was not born when they were filed and approved. Against the parents will, they had to hand their son over to the men, until they could get approval from the government to let the child in to the US. It took the couple 10 months to get their son back.

The author’s attitude towards Lae Choo, is that she is a fighter and very strong, however she is also shown to be a victim. “”You, too,” reproached Law Choo in a voice eloquent with pain. But accustomed to obedience she yieled the boy to her husband, who in turned delivered him to the first officer.” (pg. 323) In this passage, the image of Lae Choo is of her being a victim of the law, although they had all of the required papers to return from China, no one informed them that they needed approval for the child. Lae Choo is described in the story has a strong woman because her child was taken away, although she was very sad, scared and depressed, she continued to live for her child and do everything she could to get him back in her arms.

My attitude towards Law Choo, is that she loves her son with all of her heart and he is everything to her. The love she has is what helps her through one of the toughest times in her life. “Ah, how could I close my eyes with my arms empty of the little body that has filled them every night for the more than twenty moons! You do not know – man – what it is to miss the feel of the little finger and the little toes… Even in the darkness his darling eyes used to shine up to mine..” (pg. 324) “She fell on her knees and stretch her hungry arms towards her son.” (pg. 329) Both of these quotes from the passage describe the love Lae Choo has for her son, the Little One. The following quote describes Lae Choo’s love for her child.
A mother’s love for her child is like nothing else in the world. It knows no law, no pity, it dares all things, and crushed down remorselessly all that stand in its path..
-Agatha Christie

The passage describes Hom Hing’s view of his wife as weak and heart broken. This is shown in the story with the following quote. “Her food she takes only when I bed her and her tears fall continually. She finds no pleasure in dress or flowers and cares not to see her friends. He eyes stare all night. I think before another moon she will pass into the land of spirits.” (pg. 326). Hom Hing describes his wife as a woman that has lost her reason for living and if she does not get her son, she will die of a broken heart.

The passage describes, James Clancy, the young white lawyer’s, view of Lae Choo as
feeling sad for her and wanting to help, but then he uses his position to take advantage of the couple and the love she has for her son. “It’s not right,” cried the young man indignantly. Then he made his proposition.” (pg. 326) “Well, I will need at least five hundred to start with.” (pg. 327) “Stop, white man, Stop!” Lae Choo, panting and terrified, had started forward and not stood beside him, clutching his sleeve excitedly.” (pg. 327) This quotes from the passage reveal, James Clancy acting like he is set that the couple has not gotten their son back but then he see an opportunity to use take advantage of them and charge them a large amount of money to help get their son back. If he truly and selfishly wanted to help the couple, he could have charged less or nothing at all, or allow them to make payments, instead he had already taken all of their money for the previous letters he wrote to Washington and now he accepted all of Lae Choo’s jewelry as payment. James Clancy is a perfect example of a person that can help another person, however he sees an opportunity and takes advantage of the situation.

Lae Choo views herself as a scared and strong woman, and knows that the love for her child will bring him back to her. The passage started with Lae Choo being scared to hand her son over to the men on the boat because she did not know what was going to happen and how her son was going to be taken care of, but the idea that it would only be for a night and obeying the law is why she let him go. The next day he did not come home and for the 10 months he was away she was scare she would never see him again. However, the love for her child keep her pushing and being willing to give up anything that she had to get him back.


Lae Choo can be viewed in many different ways by many different people and depending on who the person is, they can each see her differently. 




Works Cited


Easton, Edith, et at. "Young, in the Land of the Free." The Literature of California, vol 1, University of California Press, 200, pp 312-329

A Mother's Love for her Child
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Tuesday, April 9, 2019

Week 11, Reading Notes A, Henderson


California 13 is a poem describing where Hwy 13 can lead you. It is a freeway between Berkeley and Alameda. Hwy 13 can lead you to Ashby Ave in Berkeley. “A patch of connecting highway thru the village of a philosopher’s theory, where nothing exists in pure logic.” (119) And describes the landscape seen while driving down Hwy 13, silver gleam of the bay, mountain range headings for L.A. Hwy 13 takes you to Hwy 5 to the Grapevine, which will lead you to L.A.

Lost Angeles is a poem describing Hwy 5, four lanes wide, from LAX to Hollywood to the ancient road to old Mexico. A couple meets on Hollywood Blvd, they look like movie stars, they go out to a movie and then go back to where they met, and parted their ways.

San Dijuana is a poem about a highway that leads to La Mesa, a mini-city in San Dijuana. It describes a series of events with a drunk couple. “a hyper filmic reality the latina and the black man often plastered in the placid night two drunken considerate clowns amid the lush vegetation lights from the window..” (129)

91 Bus is about a person on a bus driving down Sunset Blvd, towards Beverly Hills. While on the bus the person observes what is going on around him on the streets. “Santa Monica Boulevard West Hollywood to the sea the number 4.” (127)

In these poems by David Henderson, he uses imaginary to describe what is going on around him, he does this by describing the landscape, people, and events. Henderson uses one common symbol in all of these poems, which is a highway and where it leads.

Wednesday, April 3, 2019

Project 2, Week 10, Female Character: Lae Choo




Topic 3: From a piece of fiction choose a female character on whom to focus, and create a project.

Lae Choo, is a female from the passage, In the Land of the Free, by Edith Maud Easton. I will be focusing on her as a female character and creating a project that will show what the author’s and my attitude are towards her. The project will also discuss two other character’s views of Lae Choo. Lastly, the project will discuss how Lae Choo views herself and give quotes from the passage to support the different views.

In the passage, Lae Choo is a Chinese woman, who was married to her husband, Hom Hing, they lived in San Francisco together. Lae Choo, returned to China to give birth to their child, the Little One. Her husband, Hom Hing stayed in San Francisco and continued to work as a merchant, he owned a store and they lived above it. Lae Choo and her son had stayed in China longer than they expected because Hom Hing’s parents were ill and she needed to take care of them. Hom Hing had never met his son, who was 20 months old. Lae Choo and the Little One arrived under the Golden Gate bridge aboard, Easter Queen. On this day, Hom Hing met his son for the first time and as they were leaving the ship the family was stopped by two men with the initials U.S.C. on their caps. The Little One did not have any papers from Washington allowing him to enter and none of the papers regarding Lae Choo had mentioned anything about a child, because he was not born when they were filed and approved. Against the parents will, they had to hand their son over to the men, until they could get approval from the government to let the child in to the US. It took the couple 10 months to get their son back.

The author’s attitude towards Lae Choo, is that she is a fighter and very strong, however she is also shown to be a victim. “”You, too,” reproached Law Choo in a voice eloquent with pain. But accustomed to obedience she yieled the boy to her husband, who in turned delivered him to the first officer.” (323) In this passage, the image of Lae Choo is of her being a victim of the law, although they had all of the required papers to return from China, no one informed them that they needed approval for the child. Lae Choo is described in the story has a strong woman because her child was taken away, although she was very sad, scared and depressed, she continued to live for her child and do everything she could to get him back in her arms.

My attitude towards Law Choo, is that she loves her son with all of her heart and he is everything to her. The love she has is what helps her through one of the toughest times in her life. “Ah, how could I close my eyes with my arms empty of the little body that has filled them every night for the more than twenty moons! You do not know – man – what it is to miss the feel of the little finger and the little toes… Even in the darkness his darling eyes used to shine up to mine..” (324) “She fell on her knees and stretch her hungry arms towards her son.” (329) Both of these quotes from the passage describe the love Lae Choo has for her son, the Little One. The following quote describes Lae Choo’s love for her child.
A mother’s love for her child is like nothing else in the world. It knows no law, no pity, it dares all things, and crushed down remorselessly all that stand in its path..
-Agatha Christie

The passage describes Hom Hing’s view of his wife as weak and heart broken. This is shown in the story with the following quote. “Her food she takes only when I bed her and her tears fall continually. She finds no pleasure in dress or flowers and cares not to see her friends. He eyes stare all night. I think before another moon she will pass into the land of spirits.” (326). Hom Hing describes his wife as a woman that has lost her reason for living and if she does not get her son, she will die of a broken heart.

The passage describes, James Clancy, the young white lawyer’s, view of Lae Choo as
feeling sad for her and wanting to help, but then he uses his position to take advantage of the couple and the love she has for her son. “It’s not right,” cried the young man indignantly. Then he made his proposition.” (326) “Well, I will need at least five hundred to start with.” (327) “Stop, white man, Stop!” Lae Choo, panting and terrified, had started forward and not stood beside him, clutching his sleeve excitedly.” (327) This quotes from the passage reveal, James Clancy acting like he is set that the couple has not gotten their son back but then he see an opportunity to use take advantage of them and charge them a large amount of money to help get their son back. If he truly and selfishly wanted to help the couple, he could have charged less or nothing at all, or allow them to make payments, instead he had already taken all of their money for the previous letters he wrote to Washington and now he accepted all of Lae Choo’s jewelry as payment. James Clancy is a perfect example of a person that can help another person, however he sees an opportunity and takes advantage of the situation.

Lae Choo views herself as a scared and strong woman, and knows that the love for her child will bring him back to her. The passage started with Lae Choo being scared to hand her son over to the men on the boat because she did not know what was going to happen and how her son was going to be taken care of, but the idea that it would only be for a night and obeying the law is why she let him go. The next day he did not come home and for the 10 months he was away she was scare she would never see him again. However, the love for her child keep her pushing and being willing to give up anything that she had to get him back.


Lae Choo can be viewed in many different ways by many different people and depending on who the person is, they can each see her differently. 












References:
The Literature of California, Volume 1, Hicks, Houston, Kingston, Young, In the Land of the Free, by Edith Maud Easton pg 321-329
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Monday, April 1, 2019

Week 10, Reading Notes A, Mori


The Woman Who Makes Swell Doughnuts by Toshio Mori, is a story of an elderly woman.
“..she has lived her life: given birth to six children, worked side by side with her man for forty years, working in the fields, working in the house, caring for the grandchildren..” pg 584
“.. all that could be for her no was to sit and be served: duty done, work done, time clock punched; old-age security; easy chair; soft serene hours till death take her.” pg 584
“And I think it would be a shame to talk of her doughnuts after she is dead, after she is formless.” pg 585
I enjoyed reading this story of a woman, who is the neighborhood, “Mama”. She is described as a woman that has lived her life to it’s fullest and still wants to please others. She does this by the delish doughnuts she makes fresh for her visitors. The visitor then shares how she makes him feel and even though they may not always speak they know and understand what they are thinking. The visitor also says that he wants to talk about her doughnuts now and not wait until she has died because people should know how good they are.
So many times in life we don’t say things to people that we want to such as, thank you, tell them why they are special or important to us, then the time may come when they die or something happens to them. So many times people have regrets because they didn’t get to say what they wanted to for many different reasons. It can even be something that is bothering you and you are fearful that it may cause an argument, but you should have the conversation because it might end up being a good and positive thing. This is a great example, that you should always say the things you have to say or feel because there may come a time that it is too late and those words are lost.

Project Action Plan , Week 9, Lae Choo from In the Land of the Free


Topic 3: From a piece of fiction choose a female character on whom to focus, and create a project.

From a piece of fiction (short story, section of novel, or a play) choose a female character on whom to focus, and create a project that discusses some of the following questions: 
  • What is the author’s attitude towards her? (how can you tell?)
  • What is your attitude towards her? 
  • How do (at least 2) other characters view her? 
  • How does she view herself?

The female character I am choosing for my project is Lae Choo from the passage, In the Land of the Free, by Edith Maud Easton.

In the passage, Lae Choo is a Chinese woman, who was married to her husband, Hom Hing, they lived in San Francisco, Lae Choo, returned to China to give birth to their child, the Little One. Her husband, Hom Hing stayed in San Francisco and continued to work as a merchant, he owned a store and they lived above it. Lae Choo and her son had stayed in China longer than they expected because Hom Hing’s parents were ill and she needed to take care of them. Hom Hing had never met his son, who was 20 months old. Lae Choo and The Little One arrived under the Golden Gate bridge aboard, Easter Queen. Hom Hing met his son and as they were leaving the ship the family was stopped by two men with the initials U.S.C. on their caps. The Little One did not have any papers and none of the papers about Lae Choo had mentioned anything about a child, because he was not born when the papers were filed. Against the parents will they had to hand their son over to the men, until they could get approval from the government to let the child in to the US. It took the couple 10 months to get their son back.

The author’s attitude towards Lae Choo, is that she is a fighter and very strong, however she is also shown to be a victim.

My attitude towards Law Choo, is that she loves her son so much, that it is the love she has that helps her through one of the toughest times in her life.

The passage describes Hom Hing’s view of his wife as weak and heart broken. This is shown in the story with the following quote. “Her food she takes only when I bed her and her tears fall continually. She finds no pleasure in dress or flowers and cares not to see her friends. He eyes stare all night. I think before another moon she will pass into the land of spirits.” pg 326.

The passage describes, James Clancy, the young white lawyer’s, view of Lae Choo as
feeling sad for her and wanting to help, but then he uses his position to take advantage of the couple and the love of Lae Choo’s love for her son.

Lao Choo views herself as a very scared woman, but knows that the love for her child will bring him back to her.

Week 17, Weekly Analysis, America is in the Heart

America Is in the Heart by Carlos Bulosan (604-610) How do you keep your personal worth from changing when your environment tells you...