The Woman Warrior Quotes by Maxine Hong Kingston (2024)

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The Woman WarriorbyMaxine Hong Kingston
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The Woman Warrior Quotes Showing 1-30 of 45

“I learned to make my mind large, as the universe is large, so that there is room for paradoxes.”
Maxine Hong Kingston, The Woman Warrior

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“You can't eat straight A's.”
Maxine Hong Kingston, The Woman Warrior

tags: expectations, poverty, school

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“You're too young to decide to live forever.”
Maxine Hong Kingston, The Woman Warrior

tags: inspirational, philosophy-of-life

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“We're all under the same sky and walk the same earth; we're alive together during the same moment.”
Maxine Hong Kingston, The Woman Warrior

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“Not many women got to live out the daydream of women—to have a room, even a section of a room, that only gets messed up when she messes it up herself.”
Maxine Hong Kingston, The Woman Warrior

tags: independent-women

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“I'm going away anyway. I am. Do you hear me? I may be ugly and clumsy, but one thing I am not, I'm not retarded. I may be ugly and clumsy, but one thing I am not, I'm not retarded. There's nothing wrong with my brain. Do you know what the Teacher Ghosts say about me? They tell me I'm smart, and I can win scholarships. I can get into colleges. I've already applied. I'm smart. I can do all sorts of things. I know how to get A's, and they say I could be a scientist or a mathematician if I want. I can make a living and take care of myself. So you don't have to find me a keeper who's too dumb to know a bad bargain. I'm so smart, if they say write ten pages, I can write fifteen. I can do ghost things even better than ghosts can. Not everyone thinks I'm nothing. I am not going to be a slave or a wife. Even if I am stupid and talk funny amd get sick, I won't let you turn me into a slave or a wife. I'm getting out of here. I can't stand living here anyore. It's your fault I talk weird.”
Maxine Hong Kingston, The Woman Warrior

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“Long ago in China, knot-makers tied string into buttons and frogs, and rope into bell pulls. There was one knot so complicated that it blinded the knot-maker. Finally an emperor outlawed this cruel knot, and the nobles could not order it anymore. If I had lived in China, I would have been an outlaw knot-maker.”
Maxine Hong Kingston, The Woman Warrior

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“Hunger also changes the world—when eating can't be a habit, than neither can seeing.”
Maxine Hong Kingston, The Woman Warrior

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“She was one of the stars, a bright dot in blackness, without home, without a companion, in eternal cold and silence.”
Maxine Hong Kingston, The Woman Warrior

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“Nobody supports me at the expense of his own adventure. Then I get bitter: I am not loved enough to be supported. That I am not a burden has to compensate for the sad envy when I look at women loved enough to be supported. Even now China wraps double binds around my feet.”
Maxine Hong Kingston, The Woman Warrior

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“Those of us in the first American generations have had to figure out how the invisible world the emigrants built around our childhoods fits in solid America.”
Maxine Hong Kingston, The Woman Warrior

tags: asian-american, assimiliation, culture, culture-identity, emigrants, immigrants

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“When you raise girls, you're raising children for strangers.”
Maxine Hong Kingston, The Woman Warrior

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“Deny accidents and wrest fault from the stars.”
Maxine Hong Kingston, The Woman Warrior

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“The work of preservation demands that the feelings playing about in one's guts not be turned into action. Just watch their passing like cherry blossoms.”
Maxine Hong Kingston, The Woman Warrior

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“I may be ugly and clumsy, but one thing I'm not, I'm not retarded.”
Maxine Hong Kingston, The Woman Warrior

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“Human beings don't work like this in China. Time goes slower there. Here we have to hurry, feed the hungry children before we're too old to work. I feel like a mother cat hunting for its kittens. She has to find them fast because in a few hours she will forget how to count or that she had any kittens at all. I can't sleep in this country because it doesn't shut down for the night. Factories, canneries, restaurants - always somebody somewhere working through the night. It never gets done all at once here. Time was different in China. One year lasted as long as my total time here; one evening so long, you could visit your women friends, drink tea, and play cards at each house, and it would still be twilight. It even got boring, nothing to do but fan ourselves. Here midnight comes and the floor's not swept, the ironing's not ready, the money's not made. I would be still young if we lived in China. (1983: 98)”
Maxine Hong Kingston, The Woman Warrior

tags: immigration

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“The Revolution put an end to prostitution by giving women what they wanted: a job and a room of their own. (1983: 61)”
Maxine Hong Kingston, The Woman Warrior

tags: china

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“My mother has told me once and for all the useful parts. She will add nothing unless powered by necessity, a riverbank that guides her life. She plants vegetable gardens rather than lawns; she carries the odd-shaped tomatoes home from the field and eats food left for the gods.”
Maxine Hong Kingston, The Woman Warrior

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“If you should decide during your old age that you would like to live another five hundred years, come here and drink ten pounds of this sap,” they told me. “But don’t do it now. You’re too young to decide to live forever.”
Maxine Hong Kingston, The Woman Warrior

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“You must not tell anyone, what I am about to tell you.”
Maxine Hong Kingston, The Woman Warrior

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“In America my mother has eyes as strong as boulders, never once skittering off a face, but she has not learned to place decorations and phonograph needles, nor has she stopped seeing land on the other side of the oceans. Now her eyes include the relatives in China, as they once included my father smiling and smiling in his many western outfits, a different one for each photograph that he sent from America. (1983: 59)”
Maxine Hong Kingston, The Woman Warrior

tags: immigration

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“No husband of mine will say, “I could have been a drummer, but I had to think about the wife and kids. You know how it is.” Nobody supports me at the expense of his own adventure. Then I get bitter: no one supports me.”
Maxine Hong Kingston, The Woman Warrior

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“A new darkness pulled away the room, inked out flesh and outlined bones. My mother was wide awake again. She become sharply herself - bone, wire, antenna - but she was not afraid. She had been pared down like this before, when she had travelled up the mountains into rare snow - alone in white not unlike being alone in black. She had also sailed a boat safely between land and land.”
Maxine Hong Kingston, The Woman Warrior

tags: darkness, snow, space

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“The villagers were speeding up the circling of events because she was too shortsighted to see that her infidelity had already harmed the village, the waves of consequences would return unpredictably, sometimes in disguise, as now, to hurt her. This roundness had to be made coin-sized so that she would see is circumference: punish her at the birth of her baby. Awaken her to the inexorable. People who refused fatalism because they could invent small resources insisted on culpability. Deny accidents and wrest fault from the stars.”
Maxine Hong Kingston, The Woman Warrior

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“And I had to get out of hating range.”
Maxine Hong Kingston, The Woman Warrior

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“As they walked back to the laundry, Brave Orchid showed her sister where to buy the various groceries and how to avoid Skid Row. "On days when you are not feeling safe, walk around it. But you can walk through it unharmed on your strong days." On weak days you notice bodies on the sidewalk, and you are visible to Panhandler Ghosts and Mugger Ghosts.”
Maxine Hong Kingston, The Woman Warrior

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“Maybe because I was the one with the tongue cut loose, I had grown inside me a list of over two hundred things that I had to tell my mother so that she would know the true things about me and to stop the pain in my throat.”
Maxine Hong Kingston, The Woman Warrior

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“Mothers who love their children take them along.”
Maxine Hong Kingston, The Woman Warrior

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“The black well of sky and stars went out and out and out forever; her body and her complexity seemed to disappear.”
Maxine Hong Kingston, The Woman Warrior

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“For hours she lay on the ground, alternately body and space. Sometimes a vision of normal comfort obliterated reality:”
Maxine Hong Kingston, The Woman Warrior

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Quotes By Maxine Hong Kingston

The Woman Warrior Quotes by Maxine Hong Kingston (2024)

FAQs

The Woman Warrior Quotes by Maxine Hong Kingston? ›

Embrace your inner warrior, face your challenges head-on, and never let anyone or anything hold you back. It's time to rise up, take control of your life, and unleash your true potential. Remember, you are a warrior, and you have the power to conquer anything that comes your way!

What was the best quote from The Woman Warrior? ›

Embrace your inner warrior, face your challenges head-on, and never let anyone or anything hold you back. It's time to rise up, take control of your life, and unleash your true potential. Remember, you are a warrior, and you have the power to conquer anything that comes your way!

What is the meaning of The Woman Warrior by Maxine Hong Kingston? ›

Fundamental to The Woman Warrior is the theme of finding one's own, personal voice. Interspersed throughout the memoir's five chapters are numerous references to this physical and emotional struggle.

What is the main theme of The Woman Warrior? ›

The main themes in The Woman Warrior are the oppression of women in patriarchal cultures, the contrasting identities of a Chinese American, and silence vs. expression.

What is the significance of the final story in The Woman Warrior? ›

In the last chapter, "A Song for a Barbarian Reed Pipe," in which Kingston describes her childhood emotional experiences and the conflicts she felt growing up in a Chinese household in America, she depicts the pains of finding a personal identity and a voice to express herself to her parents and a society that do not ...

What are some quotes from The Woman Warrior by Maxine Hong Kingston? ›

You're too young to decide to live forever. We're all under the same sky and walk the same earth; we're alive together during the same moment. Not many women got to live out the daydream of women—to have a room, even a section of a room, that only gets messed up when she messes it up herself. I'm going away anyway.

What is a famous inspirational quote by a woman? ›

“I raise up my voice—not so that I can shout, but so that those without a voice can be heard. … We cannot all succeed when half of us are held back.” – Malala Yousafzai.

What is a short summary of The Woman Warrior? ›

Brief summary

The Woman Warrior by Maxine Hong Kingston tells the story of a Chinese-American girl coming of age in California. It explores themes of cultural identity, family dynamics, and the power of storytelling.

Is The Woman Warrior Based on a true story? ›

Upon examining The Woman Warrior and comparing the book to two theories of autobiography, it is clear that although Kingston's work contains numerous elements of fictionalization, at the core it remains an autobiography.

What is the Chinese culture in The Woman Warrior? ›

In The Woman Warrior, the value of women and what is seen as feminine by Chinese culture is rooted in Confucianism. The Confucian view of women is that they are inferior to men (Zhan 275), and this is shown by Chinese women being viewed as being submissive, passive, and powerless (Zhan 269).

What is the main conflict in The Woman Warrior? ›

The conflict between races is revealed in the silence of the narrator and other Chinese-American girls in American schools, and in the whisper of the narrator before the bosses who are racists in The Woman Warrior. The silence and whisper reflect their fear and uncertainty of the world dominated by white Americans.

What is the significance of silence in The Woman Warrior? ›

For example, her mother tells her the story about No Name Woman only once, and she prefaces the story with the instruction that Kingston cannot tell anyone and that she should never bring it up again. This silence is the dead woman's punishment for breaking social norms, and Kingston finds it unbearably cruel.

What is the point of a woman warrior? ›

Much of the memoir is about the attempt to sort out the difference between what is Chinese and what is peculiar to her family, what is real and what is just "the movies."

What is the author's purpose in The Woman Warrior? ›

In The Woman Warrior, Maxine Hong Kingston unearths the talk-stories that have silenced female voices in order to preserve and celebrate the woman warriors in her life. As an intersectional writer, Kingston confronts her double oppression within the realm of a predominantly Anglo-androcentric literary canon.

Why did Brave Orchid cut Kingstons tongue? ›

The final chapter centers around Kingston's childhood, especially her clashing identities as a Chinese-American. Brave Orchid reveals she cut the skin under Kingston's tongue when she was a child to help her talk more, but Kingston is suspicious Brave Orchid didn't want her to talk at all.

Who is the No-Name Woman in The Woman Warrior? ›

No Name Woman Maxine's Chinese aunt, who drowned herself and her baby after villagers ransacked her house as punishment for her extramarital sexual affair with a man who probably forced himself on her.

What did fate whisper to the warrior quote? ›

' The warrior whispers back, 'I am the storm. '” - Unknown.

What is a powerful strong woman quote? ›

You don't have to play masculine to be a strong woman.” “Women are never stronger than when they arm themselves with their weaknesses.” “The king may rule the kingdom, but it's the queen who moves the board.”

Who was the most feared female warrior? ›

These 7 women come straight out of the history books, and in their time, they were a force to be reckoned with.
  • Nzinga of Ndongo and Matamba (Angola) ...
  • Artemisia I of Caria (Turkey) ...
  • Tomoe Gozen (Japan) ...
  • Queen Tomyris (Asia/Middle East) ...
  • Boudicca (England) ...
  • Lozen (America) ...
  • Isabella I of Castile (Spain)
Sep 20, 2016

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