Contributor: Melissa Kowalski. Lesson ID: 12727
Why would you leave your native country, and maybe even family members, for a foreign country? Where would you live? What if the country did not want you and "your kind"? Join the immigrant "Club"!
What might it feel like to pick up and move to another, very foreign, country?
In The Joy Luck Club, all four mothers have immigrated to the United States separately, but they form a bond — first through their church and then through the Joy Luck Club.
While some of the women have come by themselves, others have come with their husbands who are either Chinese or American. To learn more about the history of Chinese migration to the United States, read the following article. As you read, answer the following questions in the notebook or journal you started keeping in the previous lessons of this series:
Read Chinese Immigrants in the United States, by Jie Zong and Jeanne Batalova, from the Migration Policy Institute. When you have finished reading and answering the questions, read the following three chapters or short stories: "The Moon Lady: Ying-Ying St. Clair," "Rules of the Game: Waverly Jong," and "The Voice from the Wall: Lena St. Clair." Use the same copy of The Joy Luck Club that you obtained for the first lesson in this series. As you read, take notes in your notebook or journal on Ying-Ying's experiences as a child and the day that greatly influenced her life. Also, note how two of the daughters, Waverly and Lena, differ from their mothers.
After reading and taking notes, move on to the Got It? section to test your knowledge of these chapters or stories and explore the intersecting lives of mothers and their young daughters.