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Hardcover Red Sorrow Book

ISBN: 1559705698

ISBN13: 9781559705691

Red Sorrow

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Format: Hardcover

Condition: Very Good*

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Book Overview

"Red Sorrow . . . reminds us that it is people who make history." --Atlanta Journal-Constitution At the outbreak of the Cultural Revolution, thirteen-year-old Nanchu watched asRed Guards burst into... This description may be from another edition of this product.

Customer Reviews

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Exposing the dangers of group think

It was a cold and rainy day and my wife and I were out of town attending a wedding. Checked out of the motel and too early for the wedding we drove around wasting time before we had to arrive at the church. Conversation had become stilted so I thought my wife would like to hear some of the stories from Red Sorrow. So, I told her about the teachers who were ridiculed and beaten by their young students. I told her about the school principal who after being beaten and spat upon by her students was so humiliated that when she escaped from the room where the students had imprisoned her she ran down to the railroad tracks, laid on them and awaited her death. I told her about Nanchus parents who were brought before the student body and tormented and humiliated. By that time, my wife had enough. She did not want to hear any more.This book gives the reader insight to postwar China- the Great Leap Forward that resulted in the Great Famine where 40 million Chinese perished; the Cultural Revolution and the raise of the Red Guards and the ensuring struggle for power among the leadership of China. It is one thing to understand the ebb and flow of history, but is quite another thing to understand how this history affected real people. In Red Sorrow we see how a family, dedicated to the Revolution becomes sweep up in the currents of history as we follow Nanchu from the age of thirteen to age thirty-three. It is a riveting story, as the tormented becomes the tormentor. Her parents accused of being spies and traitors are beaten and humiliated, the children become objects of scorn and ridicule. Yet, this same child who suffered unimaginable pain, joins the Red Guards and becomes a tormentor herself. We can understand what a child must do to survive, but as she grows up and attends college she still plays the same game. As an adult, she will torment to insure her survival. I also understand that. But what is missing in this book is Nanchus introspection on this behavior. She passes over it too quickly as if she is embarrassed by it. It would have been a stronger book if she reflected more in depth what she was feeling and why she would participate in the degradation of another human being. Why did these kids who lived decent and honest lives kick to death their High School teacher? The answer is not simple, but could not groupthink be a contribution cause? Decent people will do indecent things when they are in a group that thinks alike. As I read this book I could not shake the uneasy feeling that this madness is raising its head in America. No, we do not have Red Guards who beat and humiliate those who disagree with them; we have students, parents and interest groups who will sue and punish those who disagree with the politically correct thinking of the day. Bernard Goldberg in his book Arrogance: Rescuing America From the Media Elite tells of the effects of groupthink in the newsrooms of Americans great newspapers. Editors have to negotia

Coming of Age in the Cultural Revolution

I still remember my confusion as I tried to understand the angry faces staring back at me from my Weekly Reader. I was a sixth grade student at the school for missionary children in Akita, Japan. The year was 1966. I was skeptical. I didn't believe that these new kids called the Red Guards were really doing anything new. The Cultural Revolution was just beginning. It wasn't called the Cultural Revolution then. It wasn't called anything. How could this be anything new? Of course, my thinking was influenced by my background. My parents were missionaries, and Communists don't like missionaries. The Communists took over in 1949, not in 1966. So when I saw these pictures of the Red Guards, I brushed it off as more of the same. In my mind, I had images of wild kids turning in their Christian parents to the authorities. I concluded that it was just another form of the repression of God-fearing people that had been a matter of fact in China since the Communist takeover.I was wrong. The Cultural Revolution represented a major paradigm shift. It was not the persecution of religious people by the Communist party as I had assumed. It was the persecution of Communists by the Red Guards, instigated by Mao because of party rivalry between Mao and Liu Shaoqi. The first person to clear this up for me was Jung Chang in her book, "Wild Swans." That book was very helpful in guiding me to a better understanding of what really happened during those years. So what is unique about Red Sorrow?I think the major advantage of this book, is that it directly addresses the human story behind the angry faces. Most poignant, and profoundly disturbing is the rapidity with which Nanchu became the very thing that had caused her so much pain. She describes in detail how she and her brother were constantly picked on and harassed, and spit on by children in the neighborhood because both of her parents were in detention. Then, when she is given a chance to join the Red Guards, her craving for acceptance is so profound that she joins the group of brutal young people who find their entertainment in bringing pain and suffering to the sick and elderly. Then to the countryside. Nanchu's description of life in the countryside is the best I have read. Most personal accounts of the Cultural Revolution are written by people who, by some means or another, were able to leave China, and then write of their experiences after they have assimilated into their adopted Western culture. They are not translated from Chinese; they are written in English. Interestingly enough, many of these people have managed, somehow, to escape the worst of the "countryside" experience. Not Nanchu. Her description is rich and painful, mainly because she did not escape the experience. She lived in very Spartan (inhuman) conditions in the northernmost province in Manchuria, basically living the life of a convict who is sentenced to hard labor, even though the program was certainly not pr

Sad and moving account of China's cultural revolution

This book should be required reading for every thinking person. For those of us who came of age in the U.S. in the '60's and 70's, it is an eye-opening account of what was secretly being done to our peers half a world away. Nanchu's moving account of her family's experience during China's "cultural revolution" has lessons for us to learn about how lucky we really are. It should also help to open our eyes about what is still going on today behind the bamboo curtain.
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