Do not let the heavy volume scare you. It is well written, draws you in as you read about the diversity of Asians in America and their struggles.
Some takeaways:
The story and movie of The Joy Luck Club was best said by actress Tamlyn Tomita (Waverly), “... The book was not only the touchstone for telling the Asian American story… The effect was that America, through this movie, thought it finally ‘understood’ what it meant to be Asian American or specifically Chinese American.”
In the chapter, After Connie, SuChin Park has made it clear that she wouldn't have been able to break into the business of news at all had it not been for those before her, such as Connie Chung. Connie Chung paved the way for news stations to want to hire their own versions of her, a professional, classy Asian woman who could hold out next to an older white male so that that news station could be considered progressive, and forward-thinking. In other words, it was tokenism. This time, it worked to the Asian women's advantage.
The funny thing about racism is that everybody wants to be thought as Progressive and modern but yet they did a lot of whitewashing. Let me explain, some of the movie's leads were written to be Asian actors. Yet they casted white Americans to play Asians. They didn't even think of allowing Asian actors to draw from personal experiences to depict what the Asian character they're playing is going through. The executives were so concerned Asian actors wouldn't be box office draws.
For the movie Better Luck Tomorrow it was a follow up to The Joy Luck Club but it was an independent film with an all Asian American cast. Critics didn't know what to make out of it. These kids were shown as normal kids without all the typical Asian stereotypes. These kids were shown as shallow, empty, amoral individuals who are not nerds, curses, and omg, dares to cheat on tests! Quick, get the smelling salt. Roger Ebert saw the movie and stated beautifully, “ .. that its only responsibility to our communities was to make a good film.” That's what the director, screenwriter, and actors did and people were uncomfortable with that depiction. The audience were uncomfortable with the movie because the Asians were going outside of their stereotyped box.
If you're interested in finding out the history, evolution, and how much more we have to do, this is a busy read.
Fairly fast read with fold-outs, cartoons, and a wealth of perspective from who's who of yester people who paved the way to today's generation.
Pace: 4 /5
Writing: 4/5
Accuracy: 5/5
Enjoyment: 5/5