Red Scarf Girl

Red Scarf Girl

by

Ji-li Jiang

Aunt Wu and her husband, Uncle Tian, are friends of Dad’s from the theater company. After Thin-Face and his faction gain power in the company, they persecute Aunt Wu and subject her to public humiliation because she had relationships with other men before she married Uncle Tian—and the Communist Party objects to behavior that it considers sexually promiscuous. When Thin-Face loses power, Aunt Wu regains her standing in the company.

Aunt Wu Quotes in Red Scarf Girl

The Red Scarf Girl quotes below are all either spoken by Aunt Wu or refer to Aunt Wu. For each quote, you can also see the other characters and themes related to it (each theme is indicated by its own dot and icon, like this one:
Conformity vs. Loyalty Theme Icon
).
Chapter 16: The Incriminating Letter Quotes

The letter complained about the situation in the theater. The faction in power, the Rebels, did whatever they wanted, ignoring the policy directives from the Central Committee of the Party, the letter said. They treated people with nonpolitical problems, like Aunt Wu, as class enemies, and they had humiliated her, shaving half her head in a yin-yang hairdo. They frequently beat their prisoners and had already beaten two to death. They even recorded the screams and moans of the prisoners being tortured, and played the tapes to frighten other prisoners under interrogation.

“We urgently hope,” the letter concluded, “that the Municipal Party Committee will investigate this situation and correct it before it is too late.” The letter was signed, “The Revolutionary Masses.”

Related Characters: Ji-li Jiang (speaker), Mom (speaker), Uncle Tian (speaker), Dad, Thin-Face, Uncle Tian, Aunt Wu, Uncle Fan Wen-chong, Uncle Zhu
Page Number: 245-256
Explanation and Analysis:
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Aunt Wu Quotes in Red Scarf Girl

The Red Scarf Girl quotes below are all either spoken by Aunt Wu or refer to Aunt Wu. For each quote, you can also see the other characters and themes related to it (each theme is indicated by its own dot and icon, like this one:
Conformity vs. Loyalty Theme Icon
).
Chapter 16: The Incriminating Letter Quotes

The letter complained about the situation in the theater. The faction in power, the Rebels, did whatever they wanted, ignoring the policy directives from the Central Committee of the Party, the letter said. They treated people with nonpolitical problems, like Aunt Wu, as class enemies, and they had humiliated her, shaving half her head in a yin-yang hairdo. They frequently beat their prisoners and had already beaten two to death. They even recorded the screams and moans of the prisoners being tortured, and played the tapes to frighten other prisoners under interrogation.

“We urgently hope,” the letter concluded, “that the Municipal Party Committee will investigate this situation and correct it before it is too late.” The letter was signed, “The Revolutionary Masses.”

Related Characters: Ji-li Jiang (speaker), Mom (speaker), Uncle Tian (speaker), Dad, Thin-Face, Uncle Tian, Aunt Wu, Uncle Fan Wen-chong, Uncle Zhu
Page Number: 245-256
Explanation and Analysis: