“Two Kinds'' and “Daughter of Invention” deal with characters seeking to fit into American life.
How do the stories treat this topic?
Select two correct answers.
The narrators of both stories react to the teasing from American-born children by hiding any signs of their cultural identity.
In both stories, the families grow closer by working together to replace their old ways of thinking with modern American values.
In both stories, conflict occurs when the narrators assert the independence they have been taught to value as Americans.
The mothers in both stories attempt to create in themselves and their children behaviors they perceive as representative of the American Dream.