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Battle Hymn of the Tiger Mother

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Battle Hymn of the Tiger Mother

Auteur(s): Amy Chua
Narrateur(s): Amy Chua
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At once provocative and laugh-out-loud funny, Battle Hymn of the Tiger Mother ignited a global parenting debate with its story of one mother’s journey in strict parenting.

Amy Chua argues that Western parenting tries to respect and nurture children’s individuality, while Chinese parents typically believe that arming children with skills, strong work habits, and inner confidence prepares them best for the future. Battle Hymn of the Tiger Mother chronicles Chua’s iron-willed decision to raise her daughters, Sophia and Lulu, the Chinese way – and the remarkable, sometimes heartbreaking results her choice inspires. Achingly honest and profoundly challenging, Battle Hymn of the Tiger Mother is one of the most talked-about books of our times.
Maternité Relations Sciences sociales Éducation des enfants Drôle Chine

Ce que les critiques en disent

"Battle Hymn of the Tiger Mother is the book we've all been waiting for - a candid, provocative, poignant and vicarious journey through the Chinese- American family culture. It will leave you breathless with its bluntness and emotion. Amy Chua is a Tiger Mother, a greatly gifted law professor and, ultimately, an honest, loving woman with a lot to say."
-Tom Brokaw

"This is one outrageous book, partly thanks to Amy Chua's writing style - Chua is pugnacious and blunt, with an unerring nose for the absurd ...The cultural divide Chua so brilliantly captures is one we stand to witness more and more in our globalized age, after all; and what with Asia and Asian achievement looming ever larger in the American imagination, the issues inherent in Battle Hymn are as important as they are entertaining... I was riveted by this book"
-Gish Jen, The Boston Globe

"Amy Chua's Battle Hymn of the Tiger Mother did more than speak to me. It screamed, shouted and lectured me. It made me simultaneously laugh with empathy and cringe with embarrassment and exasperation... Charming... Self-effacing... Guffaw-inducing"
-Terry Hong, San Francisco Chronicle

"Readers will alternately gasp at and empathize with Chua's struggles and aspirations, all the while enjoying her writing, which, like her kid-rearing philosophy, is brisk, lively and no-holds-barred. This memoir raises intriguing, sometimes uncomfortable questions about love, pride, ambition, achievement and self-worth that will resonate among success-obsessed parents... Engagingly and provocatively chronicled. Readers of all stripes will respond to [Battle Hymn of the] Tiger Mother.
-Elizabeth Chang, The Washington Post

"[Chua's] writing is smart and lively"
-Entertainment Weekly

"Chua's mindset and methods-bolstered by faith in Chinese family tradition-pose a useful challenge for an era haunted by a helicoptering ethos as hard to shake as it is to like. Here is an alternative to the queasy hypocrisy of typical hyperparents, buffeted by shifting expertise that leaves them anxious about overpressuring even as they push. Chua breaks through all that. She is a crusader invigorated by practicing what she preaches: the arduous work she believes necessary to do anything well, child-rearing included... But precisely because Chua slaves away as hard as her girls do, one thing her program is not is guilt-inducing. In the end, her ordeal with Lulu teaches Chua humility and proves her daughter's very healthy autonomy-and inspires next to no regrets."
-Slate.com
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Les plus pertinents
yeah it's a fun book. nothing extraordinarily informative. it sits on the complete end of the spectrum in a demonstrative manner so Chinese parenting seems obsurdly efficient yet emotionally taxing. neat read though. SOURCE: Teacher

interestingly annecdotal

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I found this book very informative, but perhaps in ways I didn’t expect. Being raised in a western style of parenting, I was often allowed off easy when it came to my education. When it came to the courses we would select in school, I would often hear my mother say to my step-father ‘let them decide’ or ‘allow them to follow their hearts’. I was never encouraged to take up an instrument, nor ever be pushed to excel at school….by my mother. She was more of the nurturing type. My step father however, was an immigrant from England who valued education and hard work. But because I was a kid, I often took the path of least resistance. With that being said, without him I would have never understood the true value of hard work, focus and determination.
When I graduated high school, I had no direction, and my mother and step father split up. It was a messy divorce that divided an already split family. It was in my young adult years I regretted not taking the time to learn skills for the future.
I met my (Canadian born Chinese) wife shortly before she started university to pursue a degree in Human Resources. Watching her work ethic really was the first time I truly could see the difference between Chinese parents and western ones. I was in awe.
Her younger brother began university and moved into a dorm on campus. It wasn’t but a semester in when he leaped from a 6 storey building to his death. My wife was devastated..but her parents forbid her from showing any emotions. It wasn’t until the cremation that I witnessed any pure, unadulterated emotion from any of them.
My wife never got along with her parents, ever from what I could see. She would describe her mother and father as controlling, who didn’t understand she had western influences that would conflict with their own. She desperately wanted away…far away.
Now we have two beautiful daughters, Jules and Sophia, and I often find myself worried about her style of parenting. I find her sometimes to be overbearing and have high expectations of our daughters. I desperately wanted to understand my wife and her style of parenting.
After reading the book, I feel I understand my wife AND my children much more. I know ultimately her passion for their success is driven by her desires of wanting the best for them.
Thank you, Amy Chua for such an amazing piece of work.

White father trying to understand my Chinese wife

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I am a first-generation Portuguese Canadian and I really related to this book. As a new mom and a daughter to a toned down Tiger Mother it really made me value, appreciate, and criticize how I was parented and what I can take and leave from this type of parenting. I couldn't get enough of this book. I really want Amy to write a part 2 bc I will forever wonder what happened up until the kids left the home and how they feel now. I feel like people who wrote bad reviews were likely to be caucasian or North American parents to which of course they probably couldn't relate at all to this book and the parenting practises that Amy talked about were probably appalling to them. However, I get it.

Love this book and you will too especially if you're the daughter of immigrants.

Battle Hymn of the Tiger Mother

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This book is about a very rude narcissistic racist telling you how to raise kids according to negative reinforcement training and I guess the point of the book is the show how success The Chinese way of parenting is but it really just made their kids hate The activity she poured hours into essentially wasting all the practice instead of learning something practical she also doesn’t understand the value of learning social skills through interacting with your peers, Definitely an interesting view into the entitled mind of the Chinese parent even though they are American .

It’s interesting but it will make you mad.

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