Self and Identity Among Aging Immigrants in The Joy Luck Club |
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Authors: | Michael Delucchi |
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Affiliation: | (1) Department of Sociology, William Paterson University, Wayne, New Jersey |
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Abstract: | This article uses George Herbert Mead's theory of symbolic interaction to examine self and identity among aging immigrants in Amy Tan's novel The Joy Luck Club (1989). Social scientists have largely bypassed analysis of fictional accounts of the Asian diaspora. My motivation for employing Mead's theory is to extend social scientific analysis to novels on aging and ethnicity. By examining self-narratives in fictional representations of the aging immigrant experience, I assess how identity develops out of particular social conditions and is achieved through social, psychological processes. Despite some limitations, symbolic interaction offers insights into the process whereby the present brings reinterpretation of the past and individuals are compelled to assign meaning to their life histories. |
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Keywords: | symbolic interaction self identity aging immigrants |
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