The Struggle to Be an All American Girl, by Elizabeth Wong
It’s still there, the Chinese school on Yale Street where my brother and I used to go. Despite the new coat of paint and the
high wire fence, the school I knew 10 years ago remains remarkably, stoically the same.
Every day at 5 P.M., instead of playing with our fourth and fifth grade friends or sneaking out to the empty lot to hunt
ghosts and animal bones, my brother and I had to go to Chinese school. No amount of kicking, screaming, or pleading could
dissuade my mother, who was solidly determined to have us learn the language or our heritage.
Forcibly, she walked us the seven long, hilly blocks from our home to school, deposing our defiant tearful faces before the
stern principal. My only memory of him is that he swayed on his heels like a palm tree, and he always clasped his impatient
twitching hands behind his back. I recognized him as a repressed maniacal child killer, and knew that if we ever saw his
hands we would be in big trouble.
We all sat in little chairs in an empty auditorium. The room smelled like Chinese medicine, an important faraway
mustiness. Like ancient mothballs or dirty closets. I hated that smell. I favored crisp new scents. Like the soft French
perfume that my American teacher wore in public school.
There was a stage far to the right, flanked by an American flag and the flag of the Nationalist Republic of China, which
was also red, white and blue but not as pretty.
Although the emphasis at the school was mainly language – speaking, reading, and writing – the lessons always began with
an exercise in politeness. With the entrance of the teacher, the best student would tap a bell and everyone would get up,
kowtow, and chant, “Sing san ho,” the phonetic for “How are you, teacher?”
Being ten years old, I had better things to learn than ideographs copied painstakingly in lines that ran right to left from the
tip of a moc but, a real ink pen that had to be held in an awkward way if blotches were to be avoided. After all, I could do the
multiplication tables, name the satellites of Mars, and write reports on “Little Women” and “Black Beauty.” Nancy Drew,
my favorite book heroine, never spoke Chinese.
The language was a source of embarrassment. More times than not, I had tried to disassociate myself from the nagging
loud voice that followed me wherever I wandered in the nearby American supermarket outside Chinatown. The voice
belonged to my grandmother, a fragile woman in her seventies who could outshout the best of the street vendors. Her humor
was raunchy, her Chinese rhythmless, pattern less. It was quick, it was loud, and it was unbeautiful. It was not like the quiet,
lilting romance of French or the gentle refinement of the American South. Chinese sounded pedestrian. Public.
In Chinatown, the comings and goings of hundreds of Chinese on their daily tasks sounded chaotic and frenzied. I did not
want to be thought of as mad, as talking gibberish. When I spoke English, people nodded at me, smiled sweetly, and said
encouraging words. Even the people in my culture would cluck and say that I would do well in life. “My, doesn’t she move
her lips fast,” they would say, meaning that I would be able to keep up with the world outside Chinatown.
My brother was even more fanatical than I about speaking English. He was especially hard on my mother, criticizing her,
often cruelly, for her pidgin speech-smatterings of Chinese scattered like chop suey in her conversation. “It’s not ‘ what it is,’
Mom,” he would say in exasperation. “It is “What is it, what is it, what is it!” Sometimes Mom might leave out an
occasional “the” or “a” or perhaps a verb of being. He would stop her in mid-sentence: “Say it again, Mom. Say it right.”
When he tripped over his own tongue, he’d blame it on her. “See, Mom, it is all your fault. You set a bad example.”
What infuriated my mother was when my brother cornered her on her consonants, especially “r.” My father had played a
cruel joke on Mom by assigning her an American name that her tongue would not allow her to say. No matter how hard she
tried, “Ruth” always ended up “Luth” or “Roof.”
After two years of writing with a moc but and reciting words with multiples of meanings, I finally was granted a cultural
divorce. I was permitted to stop Chinese school. I though of myself as multicultural. I preferred tacos to egg rolls; I enjoyed
Cinco de Mayo more than Chinese New Year. At last I was one of you; I was not one of them. Sadly, I still am.
Homework Questions for Wong’s “All American Girl”
Be sure to write your answers in complete sentences, rather than bullet-point lists. Your replies to each question should be a few sentences or more in length.
1. According to Wong, what is the struggle to be an all-American girl? Another way to help you answer this question is to closely examine the story for what she offers for why she struggles on the path to becoming an all-American girl. Is “this struggle” the purpose of her narrative? Or does she provide some other insight or reflection as her purpose?
2. What do you think is the most effective writing strategy that Wong uses to make the story feel real to you? Explain why this writing strategy had such an impact on you as the reader.
3. Writers employ a variety of writing strategies to encourage readers to identify with characters. Identification with characters can mean many things. (1) Identification can be a matter of feeling emotionally aligned with a character; ultimately, you feel the feelings that they feel. (2) You might recognize experiences that the character experienced that you’ve experienced. (3) You might share similar values as that of the character. Essentially, identification for some readers is “I am that character” because of the shared values and experiences. (4) At the same time, identification can be partial because you may share just a specific value or experience with the character. (5) Lastly, some readers can identify with a character just for a moment to feel sympathy or empathy for the character because their values and experiences are quite different from your own. So, the question is: Do you identify with Wong? If so, what section or part of the story compelled you to identify with her? If not, then what kept you from identifying with her?