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A Chinese American woman tells of the Chinese myths, family stories and events of her California childhood that have shaped her identity.
- Sales Rank: #6256 in Books
 - Color: Red
 - Brand: Vintage
 - Published on: 1989-04-23
 - Released on: 1989-04-23
 - Original language: English
 - Number of items: 1
 - Dimensions: 8.00" h x .60" w x 5.10" l,
 - Binding: Paperback
 - 209 pages
 
- Literature
 
 Amazon.com Review 
 The Woman Warrior is a pungent, bitter, but beautifully written memoir of growing up Chinese American in Stockton, California. Maxine Hong Kingston (China Men) distills the dire lessons of her mother's mesmerizing "talk-story" tales of a China where girls are worthless, tradition is exalted and only a strong, wily woman can scratch her way upward. The author's America is a landscape of confounding white "ghosts"--the policeman ghost, the social worker ghost--with equally rigid, but very different rules. Like the woman warrior of the title, Kingston carries the crimes against her family carved into her back by her parents in testimony to and defiance of the pain. 
 Review 
 Maxine Hong Kingston grew up in two worlds. There was "solid America," the place her parents emigrated to, and the China of her mother's "talk-stories."  In talk-stories women were warriors and her mother was still a doctor in China who could cure the sick and scare away ghosts, not a harried and frustrated woman running a stifling laundromat in California. But what is story and what is truth? In China, a ghost is a supernatural being; in America it is anyone who is not Chinese. In addition, underlying even the most exciting talk-stories of Chinese women warriors is the real oppression of Chinese women: "There is a Chinese word for the female 'I' - which is 'slave.' "  In an attempt to figure out her world, Maxine Hong Kingston finds herself creating stories of her own, filling in the blanks her mother has not told her because her daughter is, after all, not true Chinese and thus cannot be completely trusted. Can these new stories explain why she had trouble speaking in the American schools? Can they help her understand the aunt who committed adultery and whose existence is denied? The new stories refuse to fall into traditional forms, and the realizations that come from them often bring out a beautiful, passionate anger that practically burns through the pages. This is powerful, experimental writing, a combination of love, hate, frustration, and sheer beauty. -- For great reviews of books for girls, check out Let's Hear It for the Girls: 375 Great Books for Readers 2-14. -- From 500 Great Books by Women; review by Erica Bauermeister 
 From the Inside Flap 
 A Chinese American woman tells of the Chinese myths, family stories and events of her California childhood that have shaped her identity. 
Most helpful customer reviews
120 of 128 people found the following review helpful.
 Crossing the Line 
 By Hee Jung Park (Colegio Maya) 
The Woman Warrior, by Maxine Hong Kingston, captures readers with her own interpretation of what it was like to grow up as a female Chinese American.  As a little girl, she came to America with her family.  Despite being in a  new country, she had to deal with the old traditions from her homeland.  Kingston hears different legends which she pieces together to create her  woman warrior.  It becomes her source of strength in a society that  rejected both her sex as well as her race. The book, divided into five  interwoven stories, is at times confusing as it jumps around.  Nevertheless  she does a great job explaining her life while growing up.  The first  story, called "No Name Woman," tells of her paternal aunt who  bears a child out of wedlock and is harried by the villagers and by her  family into drowning herself. The family now punishes this taboo-breaker by  never speaking about her and by denying her name.  However, Kingston breaks  the family silence by writing about this rebel whom she calls "my  forebear."  The next story is called "White Tigers." It is a  myth about a heroine named Fa Mu Lan, who fights in place of her father and  saves her village.  This story became the Disney movie, Mulan.  "Sharman" is a story of Kingston's mother.  It explores what it  was like to study as a woman to become a doctor in China.  "At the  Western Palace" is about Kingston's aunt who comes to America and  discovers that her husband has remarried in America.  Finally, the last  story, "A Song for a Barbarian Reed Pipe" is about Kingston's own  experience in America when she first arrived.  She explains what it was  like to be a newcomer in a strange culture.  Kingston constantly mentions  that her friends and she are ghosts because they are American.  All of the  people who surround her family are ghosts, except for the Chinese people  who live on the Gold Mountain, a section of Chinatown in San Francisco.  Kingston feels like a ghost herself, " .... We had been born among  ghosts, were taught by ghosts, and were ourselves ghost-like.  The  Americans call us a kind of ghosts" (p.183).  The interpretation of  what ghosts mean in this book is difficult to figure out.  It could show  how some people view a person from a different culture with ignorance as if  she doesn't exist.  Kingston's The Woman Warrior has some similarities  with The Joy Luck Club by Amy Tan.  First of all, both stories are written  by Chinese American authors about their cultural heritage.  Both novels  deal with major concerns faced by Chinese American women.  Living with  their traditional culture in American society, Chinese-American women  suffer problems of cultural conflicts.  However, there are differences that  make each work distinct.  The Joy Luck Club is fiction and is not  personal. It is also more likely to be read for pleasure.  The Woman  Warrior portrays a first hand view of the cultural differences between the  United States and China.  Also, Kingston succeeds in combining her emotions  with her experiences.  The Woman Warrior is a fascinating book.  One of  the most amazing aspects of this book is Kingston's ability to show how  silence is a form of communication and how it shaped her being.  Her mother  tells her to be silent, yet she goes against her cultural standards by  talking about her aunt.  This act of will on Kingston's part offers the  readers her ancestry.  The expectation of silence can be simplified into a  symbol of oppression.  As a Korean-American, I felt the emotions and  understood how Kingston felt for being a stranger to a new culture.  Her  internal struggle to fit into two different societies is difficult.  I  personally recommend this book to anyone interested in reading about the  experience of one Chinese-American woman.  It is not the definitive story  of Chinese-American women's experience, but it is a very vivid and  well-written account of one woman's life.  Pg. 209.  Published in the  United States by Random House, Inc., New York
73 of 80 people found the following review helpful.
 Challenging, rewarding read 
 By Yaumo Gaucho 
This is a remarkably intelligent, personal account of success, failure, frustration, and identity.  No, the writing and structure are not straightforward, and yes, some of the plotline may be disturbing.  But this  is ultimately an intellectually rewarding read, and a personally  emotionally moving experience.
The anti-feminist backlash this novel  seems to elicit (e.g., on this review page) should be testimony to how  provocative it is, and how many assumptions it can challenge.
As for it  being a misrepresentation of Chinese culture, well, it's a subjective  account.  It's the culture through Maxine's eyes (and her family's eyes);  it is not meant to be an objective anthropological study.  And I did not  find it at all exoticizing.  In fact, it's a shame that MHK often gets  mentioned in the same sentence as Amy Tan -- beyond the superficial  similarity of both being Asian-American women, they have little in common.  MHK does none of the silly exoticization that AT does, and at least to me,  does not engage in the "Asians must be rescued by Western  culture" ideology of AT.  This is ultimately a personal,  autobiographical account, that is neither judgmental nor self-pitying.
0 of 0 people found the following review helpful.
 There are extensive lists of recommended books to read in a life time, this is not one of them. 
 By walter moyer 
Ramblings of stories of family relationships and cultural tales lacking organization.  The book needs editing.  Read a classic. There are reasons classic books and authors are given such a classification.
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