Open Access Open Access  Restricted Access Subscription Access
Open Access Open Access Open Access  Restricted Access Restricted Access Subscription Access

A Sublimation of Sisterhood:Amy Tan's The Hundred Secret Senses


Affiliations
1 Dronacharya Govt. College, Gurgaon, Haryana, India
     

   Subscribe/Renew Journal


The main focus of Amy Tan's novels is women. She has written about the hardships and challenges women face in a man's world, a world in which even women become partners in crime with men in repressing members of their own sex. But while there are women who connive against women in order to keep them subservient, there are others who help them subvert this dominance. Therefore we find that female bonding is a very important subject in Tan's fiction, and can see it exemplified in all her novels. Although these women are aware of each other's weaknesses, are conscious of their differences from each other, have their disagreements and jealousies, yet there is a strong connection between them.
Subscription Login to verify subscription
User
Notifications
Font Size


  • Michie, H. (1992). Sororophobia: Differences among Women in Literature and Culture. USA: Oxford University Press.
  • Snodgrass, M.E. (2004). Amy Tan: A literary Companion .North Carolina: Mc Farland and Company, Inc.
  • Tan, A. (1995). The Hundred Secret Senses: An Ivy Book. The Random House Publishing Group.
  • Yu, S. (2015). Ethnic Sisterhood in Amy Tan The Hundred Secrets Senses. http://www.ncku.edu.tw/∼gender/pdf/t-8.pdf. Web. 20 February.

Abstract Views: 366

PDF Views: 0




  • A Sublimation of Sisterhood:Amy Tan's The Hundred Secret Senses

Abstract Views: 366  |  PDF Views: 0

Authors

Gurinder Kaur Singh
Dronacharya Govt. College, Gurgaon, Haryana, India

Abstract


The main focus of Amy Tan's novels is women. She has written about the hardships and challenges women face in a man's world, a world in which even women become partners in crime with men in repressing members of their own sex. But while there are women who connive against women in order to keep them subservient, there are others who help them subvert this dominance. Therefore we find that female bonding is a very important subject in Tan's fiction, and can see it exemplified in all her novels. Although these women are aware of each other's weaknesses, are conscious of their differences from each other, have their disagreements and jealousies, yet there is a strong connection between them.

References