Analysis Of Revolution Is Not A Dinner Party

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Revolution Is Not a Dinner Party, a historical fiction book written by Ying Chang Compestine, exceptionally portrays the horrors and torture the Chinese people endured during the "revolution," or the Communist control and building of a new China. It begins with a happy 9-year-old girl named Ling who lives in a hospital complex with her father, a very successful surgeon, and her mother, a well-known doctor. Her mother, known as Mrs. Chang, is very strict, always nagging Ling to act like a woman and to be perfect in almost every way. Ling believes it is because her mother never wanted to have a daughter. Father, on the other hand, Mr. Chang, spent much time with Ling, and got very close to her, teaching her reading and English lessons. He would …show more content…

Mourning occupied the town and it became necessary that every person must cry for one hour in the morning and one hour in the afternoon. Ling had little difficulty weeping; she wept for Mrs. Wong, her apartment the Red Guards had demolished, the food she lacked, and above all, her father. Gao did not stop bullying Ling during this time. One afternoon after the teacher had left the room, Gao attacked Ling with scissors, but this time she fought back, "I swung my schoolbag fiercely against Gao's head. Cluck! Cluck! My abacus hit him. His eyes grew wide in surprise and pain." (181) Ling was proud of her actions; however, her mother was not. She was scared Gao's father, a power official, would take matters into his own hands and punish them. Days later, Ling is forced by Comrade Li to publicly apologize to Gao, but she refuses. In a matter of seconds, before Ling is further punished, Li is surrounded by soldiers and arrested. "'We are here for you!' Belly jabbed at Comrade Li's chest with a baton, bearing his broad teeth. ‘You are under arrest for being in Jiang Qing's gang'" (238) Finally amalgamated as a family, Ling, her mother, and her father who was released from prison, vow that one day they will reach true freedom in the United States. Revolution Is Not a Dinner Party is one of the most enlightening books I have ever read, showing the true horrors of the Communist …show more content…

There is no better way to learn about China's communist revolution than to live it through the eyes of an innocent child whose experiences were based on the author's first-hand experience. Readers learn how every aspect of an individual's life was changed, mostly for the worst during this time. You will also learn why and how Chairman Mao launched the revolution initially, to maintain the communist system he worked hard to create in the 1950's. As the story of Ling unfolded, I realized how it boiled down to people's struggle for existence and survival during Mao's reign, and how lucky we are to have freedom and justice in the United States; values no one should ever take for

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