The Joy Luck Club

by

Amy Tan

Jewelry Symbol Icon
Throughout the novel, valuable jewelry is passed from mothers to daughters, symbolizing inheritance and sacrifice. Almost all the main characters grow up in impoverished families without many luxuries. Owning a single piece of jewelry speaks to the hard work it took to earn it, and to the preciousness of the material possession. In Chinese tradition, jewelry has additional significance; they’re often worn as protection charms from harm. In The Joy Luck Club however, the initial owner never keeps jewelry for herself, but gives it to her daughter. Lindo’s mother’s jade pendant is her only prized possession, but she presents it to Lindo on their last day together, hoping it brings her daughter good fortune and protection. Material sacrifice, no matter how great, doesn’t matter if it protects her daughter. Lindo continues the legacy by giving the same pendant to her daughter Waverly before Waverly’s first chess competition. Similar gifts are given to June by Suyuan, and to An-mei by An-mei’s mother. More than just an inherited object, the jewelry represents a mother’s constant love and a daughter’s priceless value.
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Jewelry Symbol Timeline in The Joy Luck Club

The timeline below shows where the symbol Jewelry appears in The Joy Luck Club. The colored dots and icons indicate which themes are associated with that appearance.
Part 1, Chapter 3: The Red Candle
Mother-Daughter Relationships Theme Icon
Sacrifice Theme Icon
...enough to go to Huang Taitai’s. Before leaving, Lindo’s mother gives Lindo her precious jade necklace for good luck. Once in Huang Taitai’s home, Lindo is treated like a lowly servant,... (full context)
Fate and Autonomy Theme Icon
...her bed to increase her chance at pregnancy, as well as strips her of gold jewelry to make her deficient in the zodiac element of metal, and thus more vulnerable to... (full context)
Part 2, Chapter 1: Rules of the Game
Mother-Daughter Relationships Theme Icon
Immigration, Language, and Mistranslation Theme Icon
Sexism and Power Theme Icon
...her up for neighborhood chess tournaments. At the first tournament, Lindo gives Waverly her jade pendant, the same piece of jewelry Lindo’s mother gave young Lindo for good luck; Waverly easily... (full context)
Part 2, Chapter 3: Half and Half
Mother-Daughter Relationships Theme Icon
Sacrifice Theme Icon
...bible and calls out to God, asking for mercy. She also sacrifices a valuable sapphire ring to the ancient ocean gods—throwing the ring into the water—asking in return for Bing’s body.... (full context)
Part 3, Chapter 4: Best Quality
Mother-Daughter Relationships Theme Icon
...New Year holiday before she passes away, Suyuan gives June “her life’s importance,” a jade pendant on a gold chain. June is unsure why Suyuan calls it that, and Suyuan dies... (full context)
Mother-Daughter Relationships Theme Icon
Immigration, Language, and Mistranslation Theme Icon
...sacrifice the best quality meal for someone else’s sake. Suyuan then gives June her jade pendant, which she’s been waiting to pass on for many years. (full context)
Part 4, Chapter 1: Magpies
Mother-Daughter Relationships Theme Icon
Sexism and Power Theme Icon
...actually glass. In exchange for the fake pearls, An-mei’s mother gives An-mei a beautiful sapphire ring so An-mei can “recognize what is true.” At the same time, An-mei notices that Second... (full context)
Part 4, Chapter 4: A Pair of Tickets
Mother-Daughter Relationships Theme Icon
Sacrifice Theme Icon
...that the old couple decided to raise them as their own, and saved the expensive jewelry as the girls’ inheritance. When the twins were eight, their adoptive mother took them to... (full context)