Red Scarf Girl Essays

  • Red Scarf Girl Sparknotes

    427 Words  | 2 Pages

    In the memoir, Red Scarf Girl, by Ji-li Jiang, Ji-li changes over the course of her story because she is happy in the beginning,her mood stays the same at the beginning of the middle and then changes whent he story moves forwards in the middle. In the beginning of the story Ji-li is the happiest girl in the world. During the prologue Ji-li says” They hoped I was the happiest girl in the world, and I was”. This proves in the beginning of the story Ji-li describes that she was very happy. In the middle

  • Analysis Of Red Scarf Girl

    784 Words  | 4 Pages

    Red Scarf Girl, by Ji-Li Jiang, is an autobiography about Jiang’s life during the time of the Chinese Cultural Revolution. She lived in Shanghai, China, with her family. The time period of the Chinese Cultural Revolution was a ten year span from 1966 to 1976. It was a political movement launched by the Chairman of the Communist Party in China, Mao Zedong. His goal was to protect the Communist ideology in China. Red Scarf Girl is a story of Jiang’s personal experience from the Chinese Cultural Revolution

  • Red Scarf Girl Analysis

    1006 Words  | 5 Pages

    In the 1960’s, China was overrun by the idea that everybody must be equal, and those who are superior should be punished for their “wrongdoings”. Ji-li Jiang grew up in this unfortunate era, and her novel, Red Scarf Girl, describes the struggles that people in China faced every day of their lives during the Cultural Revolution. This unfair treatment of upper and middle class citizens is depicted by the author’s own memories of the Chinese Cultural Revolution. Ji-li Jiang recounts childhood experiences

  • Red Scarf Girl Sparknotes

    615 Words  | 3 Pages

    power comes from the barrel of a gun.” - Mao Zedong (Chairman Mao). Mao Zedong was Chairman Mao, the leader of China during the Cultural Revolution. The Cultural Revolution took place from 1966 to 1976. The memoir Red Scarf Girl by Ji-li Jiang was written about the life of a young girl, Ji-li, who lived through these hard times. Throughout the book, Ji-li shows that she grows and matures through her experiences. In the beginning of the story, Ji-li is oblivious and happy, but by the end she is mature

  • Red Scarf Girl Summary

    627 Words  | 3 Pages

    Book Review Red Scarf Girl by Ji-li Jiang Red Scarf Girl was written by Ji-li Jiang and the underlying theme throughout the memoir is loyalty to your family. The author, Ji-li Jiang grew up in China during the Cultural Revolution in 1966, led by China’s leader, Chairman Mao Zedong. This memoir focuses on Ji-li Jiang’s childhood and how her life is dramatically changed by the Cultural Revolution. I think this memoir is very well-written and it opened my eyes to really comprehend how different

  • Discrimination In 'Red Scarf Girl'

    435 Words  | 2 Pages

    fit in. In America, the media influences social norms, stereotypes, and acceptable behaviors. In Communist China, Chairman Mao and The Communist Party used propaganda to create ideology that destroyed Chinese culture and values. In the memoir, Red Scarf Girl, citizens of black class status endured severe acts of discrimination from The Cultural Revolution. Jiang Ji-li and her family were forced to make difficult decisions due to the prejudice on their family name. Ji-li was not able to audition

  • The Red Scarf Girl Critical Analysis

    560 Words  | 3 Pages

    could be related to any book. In the book, The Red-Scarf Girl: A Memoir Of The Cultural Revolution, Ji-li had to overcome all the challenges such getting called a black whelp, getting humiliated and other things that some people can’t bear that pain. The theme of “survival” does relate to this book because Ji-li had to bear public humiliation and other things in order to survive. Furthermore, the theme of “survival” relates to this book, The Red-Scarf Girl: A Memoir of the Cultural Revolution. Ji-li’s

  • Red Scarf Girl Character Analysis

    701 Words  | 3 Pages

    Have you ever wondered what It would be like if the government that is supposed to protect you went against you, Well that’s what happened to the people who lived during the Cultural revolution The Red Scarf Girl, Ji-Li Jiang is a girl who lived the Chinese Cultural Revolution, a time of fear when all the laws of China broke down, At the start life was good for Ji-Li she was good in academics and she was a social person but as the book progressed Ji-Li’s life was starting to be ruined by Bad

  • Book Analysis: Red Scarf Girl

    546 Words  | 3 Pages

    A Cloud of Oppression Experiencing the torment of a label is difficult, especially if it is given to your whole family. In the memoir Red Scarf Girl, set in the time of the Cultural Revolution, being within the upper middle class was frowned upon and proletarians were seen as the leaders of society. The label of black class status tainted the bourgeoisie, including the Jiang family, with torture, ridicule, and incrimination by others influenced by the governmentally coercive ways of Communism.

  • The Red Scarf Girl Chapter Summary

    623 Words  | 3 Pages

    Have you read or heard of the Chinese Cultural Revolution. It’s a difficult period in Chinese history, and was a massive upheaval launched by Chinese leader Mao Zedong to renew the spirit of revolution in China. The book “The Red Scarf Girl: A Memoir of the Chinese Revolution” in which the author is Ji-li Jiang, talks about this major event in Chinese history and tells the story of one girl's struggle to keep her family together during the Chinese Cultural Revolution. Ji-li changed many times in

  • Comparison Of Jay Gatby And Winter Dreams And The Great Gatsby

    1037 Words  | 5 Pages

    1. There is a quote from an anonymous speaker that says, “It takes a couple seconds to say Hello, but forever to say Goodbye.” 2. This quote can be related to the fictional characters, Jay Gatsby and Dexter Green. Both were men who met an extraordinary woman and could never seem to let her go. 3. These are characters from the book The Great Gatsby, and the short story Winter Dreams, written by F. Scott Fitzgerald. The Great Gatsby is one of the greatest novels to come out of the Jazz

  • The Giver In Lois Lowry's Red Scarf Girl

    821 Words  | 4 Pages

    had always heard of communism in a negative context. Such a society would mean that, everyone would have food, water, shelter, an education and job. This is the ideal society. So why was it talked about with disgust and horror? Until reading Red Scarf Girl, I believed in that the ideal society could, no, would someday exist. But now I have been convinced otherwise. The youth of China believed that Mao’s purpose of the cultural revolution was to unify and strengthen their country. While this was

  • Similarities Between Red Scarf Girl And Fahrenheit 451

    897 Words  | 4 Pages

    In the two books Red Scarf Girl and Fahrenheit 451 many exciting events happen. In each book there are many things you can compare to. I compared these books to each other and to other books I’ve read like Hunger Games and Diary of Anne Frank. Fahrenheit 451 is set in the future and a major theme throughout the book is censorship of the people and in Red Scarf Girl communism is the theme. Both books raise awareness of the influences government can have on our society and beliefs. Also, in both

  • Essay On Ji-Li Jiang's 'Red Scarf Girl'

    1081 Words  | 5 Pages

    “Her actions remind me that, even under unbearable circumstances, one can still believe in justice,” in David Henry Hwang’s foreword, in Ji-Li Jiang’s memoir Red Scarf Girl, commemorated even during the Great Proletarian Cultural Revolution anyone can overcome adversity (9). Ji-Li Jiang was a young teenager at the beginning of the Cultural Revolution, and living through a very political time in China’s history made Ji-Li into the person she is today. Ji-Li’s intelligence, her choices, and family

  • What Is The Coming Of Age Experience In Red Scarf Girl By Mao Zedong

    664 Words  | 3 Pages

    The novel, Red Scarf Girl, shows a coming of age experience in the main character, Ji-Li Jiang also wrote a memoir about this experience. She goes through hard times in the Chinese Cultural Revolution, which was started by Mao Zedong (also known as Chairman Mao) in an effort to spread communism throughout China in the mid-twentieth century. Many people supported this, as Mao used propaganda to make people believe that the Cultural Revolution was very beneficial. Ji-Li’s family was rich, which was

  • Analysis Of Red: A Crayon's Story

    1047 Words  | 5 Pages

    been swimming in Red’s mind until he discovers who he really is. Red: A Crayon’s Story revolves around a blue crayon who is supposed to be red; it says so on his label. However, every time he tried to draw red objects like strawberries, ants, and fire trucks, they turn out blue. The story is written from a pencil’s perspective, in which the said pencil is Red’s teacher. The reader is taken on a journey with the protagonist where Red faces copious challenges and disappointment from his friends. All

  • Allegory And Symbols In Hawthorne's Young Goodman Brown

    1440 Words  | 6 Pages

    Symbols in “Young Goodman Brown” “Young Goodman Brown” is a short story written by Nathaniel Hawthorne in the 17th century which depicts the human nature and criticizes the ideals of Puritan society by the use of various allegories and symbols. Nathaniel Hawthorne is extremely famous for his obsession with allegories and symbols, that Arlin Turner described him by saying: “In the habit of seeing meanings in everything, he thought in symbols and wrote in symbols” Symbolism for him was not only a

  • Miss Piggy Kenya Brennan Analysis

    743 Words  | 3 Pages

    There are many ideas as to what makes a feminist icon. Samantha Brennan discusses about a childhood female character that represents feminism and a body-confident role model. In her article "Miss Piggy's Feminism, Redefining Human Relationships through Martial Arts" Brennan creates an educational diction through viewing how Miss Piggy from The Muppet Show has the potential to be a feminist icon. Writing with a proud and didactic tone throughout her article, she shows how Miss Piggy's character is

  • The Five Main Causes Of Gender Inequality

    1875 Words  | 8 Pages

    realize it because some of these problems have been taught and applied to them ever since they were young so they may have ended up growing accustomed to it. People are taught about the different gender roles as kids, teaching them what boys and girls can and can't do and what their limits

  • Caravaggio Narcissus Poem Analysis

    909 Words  | 4 Pages

    It is “foolish men” who fail to see that acute insightfulness is a vehicle for precise thinking. Nevertheless, the speaker shuns drawing conclusions about whether the creation of art contributes to, or ease madness, by attributing her speculations to theories others have proposed. In the final lines of the poem, however, she endorses the decision to explore dark corners of the mind and expand the limitations of the self by drawing attention to the affective dimension of the work, the beneficent effect