Red Land Yellow River: A Story from the Cultural Revolution

Red Land Yellow River: A Story from the Cultural Revolution
Author:
ISBN:
0888994893 , 9780888994899
Publisher:
Date:
2004-09-24
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$19.95
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Product Description:
When Mao's Cultural Revolution took hold in China in 1966, Ange Zhang was 13 years old. He lived with his family in Beijing, he attended school and excelled in drawing, and his father was a famous writer whose "Yellow River Cantata" was widely considered to be the anthem of the revolution. Yet soon, Ange's life — and his family's — would change forever.

Complementing this autobiographical narrative with evocative color illustrations, archival images, and some of his own black-and-white photos, Ange gives a moving account of difficult experiences: from his early longing to join his peers in the Red Guard, to witnessing his father being publicly humiliated, to his growing alienation and disillusionment. But he finds some good fortune, too: during his "reeducation" in the countryside, Ange discovers enough emotional space to develop his own ideas and to find that he, like his father, is an artist in his own right.
Amazon.com Review:
In this moving autobiographical picture book for older children, Chinese-Canadian artist and book illustrator Ange Zhang tells the story of his teenage involvement in China's Cultural Revolution. The son of a famous Chinese writer, Zhang grew up in a comfortable Beijing home with his extended family. When the Red Guards first infiltrate his school in 1966, he feels only pride, for both his parents are high-ranking officials in the Communist Party and helped bring Chairman Mao to power. But before long, he witnesses his father's public humiliation as an intellectual and finds himself blackballed from joining the Red Guards with the rest of his friends because he is one of the "bad guys."

In simple yet unflinchingly direct prose, Zhang describes how these injustices did nothing to dampen his fervour for Mao's revolution. To his mother's unspoken horror, he forms his own one-person unit of the Guards, shaving his head and arming himself against other rebel groups. "All I wanted," he recalls, "was to be just like the other kids, to wear the olive green uniform with the red armband." It is not until he climbs to the top of his house one day and gazes over the tiled roofs of Beijing, that he begins to see his way as an artist and an individual. Illustrated with lush digitally rendered pictures of everyday life during the Cultural Revolution, along with family photographs, Red Land, Yellow River delivers a poignant reminder about the essential vulnerability of youth. A fine appendix expands the historical context. --Lisa Alward

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