Wednesday, October 23, 2019
Son of the Revolution Essay
Peter Kim HIST 354 McKenzie April 2013 Son of the Revolution Essay Right at the start of the memoir, Son of the Revolution, the readerââ¬â¢s attention is drawn to the strict nature of the daycare center the narrator is in. We find that Chinaââ¬â¢s motion towards a Socialist party is integrated down to the peopleââ¬â¢s level, even implemented and enforced in the daycares. This seems extreme to the reader, especially when the songs sung by the children are titled, ââ¬Å"Sweeping the Floorâ⬠, ââ¬Å"Working the Factoryâ⬠and ââ¬Å"Planting Trees in the Countrysideâ⬠.One doesnââ¬â¢t need much context clues to figure out what these songs are about. Consequently, this level of extreme integration has caused Chinese society to value family as second-priority to this pursuit of Socialist. However, in this setting where the family isnââ¬â¢t that well off, we learn that Heng and his siblings were spoiled by their paternal and maternal grandmothers. In regards to Mao Zedong, the people of China are led to believe that Mao was in some sort of a deity, a god that affected everyoneââ¬â¢s lives.Simultaneously, he was considered as a national father of everyone in Communist China. The author demonstrates this when recalling the sweet of relief he felt when he heard ââ¬Å"that Chairman Mao had forgivenâ⬠him, and through writing exercises that required them to repeatedly practice writing, ââ¬Å"Chairman Mao is our Great Saving Star,â⬠and ââ¬Å"We are all Chairman Maoââ¬â¢s good little children. â⬠To many outside nations, including Americans, this seems like a way of brainwashing the people, especially at such an early age.However, we already know that the leaders of the Communist Party have no such fatherly intentions for their ââ¬Å"childrenâ⬠. The ââ¬Å"Hundred Flowers Movement,â⬠a movement that encouraged Chinaââ¬â¢s peoples to openly express their voices and opinions, turns out to be a trap set to ide ntify any Rightists in the midst of people. Trying to be helpful, Hengââ¬â¢s mother is accused of being a Rightist and is sent to a labor camp to ââ¬Å"reformâ⬠her. We observe this clash of traditional Confucian value in family with the political allegiance to the Communist movement in Hengââ¬â¢s father, even to the oint where he denounces his own wife. The loyalty to Chinaââ¬â¢s communist Party over family runs deep within its people. Upon hearing that their own father is accused of being a Capitalist and anti-Party, Liang Heng and his siblings become enraged at their own father; in other words, the children honored the communist Party more than they honored their own father, which is ironic to Liang Shang, since he abandoned his wife for the Party.In addition to the Hundred Flowers Movement, Liang Hengââ¬â¢s life took another major turn of events with the initiation of ââ¬Å"The Great Leap Forward,â⬠Mao Zedongââ¬â¢s attempt to transform China from an a grarian economy into a more modernized Communist society via rapid industrialization and collective farming. Naturally, private farming would become prohibited and even accused as an act of rebellion against the revolution. However, the Great Leap Forward was a massive failure with millions of people dying from starvation. Liang Hengââ¬â¢s family was no exception, and had to accommodate for these times.The majority of this narrative takes place during the Cultural Revolution, movement that resulted from the failure of the Great Leap Forward. The main goal of the Revolution was to shift ââ¬Å"old,â⬠traditional, Capitalist China into the ââ¬Å"new,â⬠communist China to secure Mao Zedongââ¬â¢s position in power. Like his other previous endeavors, we see that the Cultural Revolution brought with it confusion and chaos to the people, particularly having to do with the change in names of everything around them from roads to stores to public parks. Liangââ¬â¢s friends have even abandoned their old names to adopt newer ââ¬Å"revolutionaryâ⬠names.Still, holding such high regards to their Chairman Mao and failing to see flaws in his methods, our narrator strives to one day carry his own Red Guard uniform, specifically upon seeing his older sister wearing her own uniform. Ironically, his own home is later raided by these Red Guards because of his familyââ¬â¢s ââ¬Å"politicalâ⬠history ââ¬â his motherââ¬â¢s relatives have moved to Taiwan, she herself is branded as a Rightist, his father is a writer, or ââ¬Å"stinking intellectual. â⬠These circumstances make it difficult for Liang Heng socially, and he is constantly persecuted and ridiculed by the rest of society because of it.
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