Conformity and Rebellion Term Paper

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Conformity and Rebellion in Works by Amy Tan, Martin Luther King Jr., Herman Melville, and Shirley Jackson

The dilemma of conformity vs. rebellion, to do something that is expected, or "has always been done," or to rebel against expectation or convention, is common in both life and literature. Three short stories, by Amy Tan; Herman Melville, and Shirley Jackson, and the essay "Letter from Birmingham Jail" by Martin Luther King Jr., express conflict between conformity and rebellion. I will analyze Tan's "Two Kinds"; King's "Letter from Birmingham Jail"; Melville's "Bartleby the Scrivener," and Jackson's "The Lottery," in that order, in terms of their themes of conformity vs. rebellion.

In Amy Tan's story "Two Kinds" (424-32) Jing-mei's Chinese mother wishes for her to conform to her own high standards of persistence and achievement in music, though Jing-mei lacks motivation. Her mother: "believed you could be anything you wanted to be in America" (424). If Jing-mei is "Not the best" it is "Because you not trying'" (426). Jing-mei's mother decides, since anything is possible in America, her daughter will become a child prodigy. Seeing a Chinese girl playing piano on the Ed Sullivan Show, she determines that Jing-mei will become a piano prodigy.

Jing-mei is initially enthusiastic about piano lessons, but her zeal vanishes once she learns playing piano is hard work. Soon she begins taking advantage of her piano teacher's deafness; as long as she appears to play correctly, Old Chong will not know the difference (427). Jing mei's mother brags: "If we ask Jing-mei wash dish, she hear nothing but music. It's like you can't stop this natural talent" (428). But in her first rebellious impulse, Jing-mei "was determined to put a stop to her foolish pride." When her first piano recital arrives, Jing-mei has not practiced, plays terribly, and humiliates her mother. She resolves never to play again. But when her practice time comes the next day, her mother forces her to the piano, as if nothing at all happened yesterday.
Jing-mei rebels: "You want me to be someone that I'm not . . . I'll never be the kind of daughter you want me to be" (430). Her mother's answer is: "Only two kinds of daughters . . . obedient and those who follow their own mind! Only one kind of daughter can live in this house. Obedient daughter!" (Tan). The essence of Jing-mei's rebellion is that her mother is trying to make her into something she is not. In the end Jing-mei does eventually play piano again, as an adult, but on her own terms.

Rebellion may be not only personal, like Jing-mei's, but societal, as within Martin Luther King Jr.'s "Letter from Birmingham Jail" (634-47). King writes while imprisoned in the Birmingham, Alabama jail in 1963 for leading a civil rights protest seeking equal rights for African-Americans. King responds in his letter to a statement by other Baptist clergymen that King's activities are "unwise and untimely" (634). His peers have asked King to "seek negotiation" and give "the new city government time to act" (636): allow the status quo (of unequal rights for blacks in Birmingham) to change slowly, on its own terms, if at all. However, as King states, a different kind of action is needed; those ways have not worked. "We have waited for more than 340 years for our constitutional and God-given rights" (637) says King; "We know through painful experience that freedom is never voluntarily given by the oppressor; it must be demanded by the oppressed."

King quotes from many sources, biblical, secular, ancient and modern, citing other rebellions against unjust laws. Quoting St. Augustine, he states: "an unjust law is not law at all" (638). Thus King implies, the necessity of his rebellion, even if he breaks the law: "A just law is a man-made code that squares with the moral law or the law of God. An unjust law . . . is out of harmony with the.....

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