Red Scarf Girl

Red Scarf Girl

by

Ji-li Jiang

Neighborhood Dictatorship Group Term Analysis

As the Cultural Revolution progressed, Neighborhood Dictatorship Groups—informal groups of volunteers who tasked themselves with making sure their neighbors and acquaintances were living up to the dictates of Chairman Mao—gradually displaced the more bureaucratic and established Neighborhood Party Committees, which were officially organized into the Chinese Communist Party hierarchy.

Neighborhood Dictatorship Group Quotes in Red Scarf Girl

The Red Scarf Girl quotes below are all either spoken by Neighborhood Dictatorship Group or refer to Neighborhood Dictatorship Group. For each quote, you can also see the other terms and themes related to it (each theme is indicated by its own dot and icon, like this one:
Conformity vs. Loyalty Theme Icon
).
Chapter 7: The Propaganda Wall Quotes

More and more, Six-Fingers and the rest of the Neighborhood Dictatorship Group seemed to be everywhere. They suggested names of possible Black Category families to the Neighborhood Party Committee. They monitored what members of the Black Categories did during the day, recording any visitors to their homes, watched their Morning Repentance and Evening Reports, and supervised their sweeping of the alley twice a day. In addition, the Neighborhood Dictatorship Group patrolled the neighborhood day and night […]

One evening they actually caught a counterrevolutionary! A ragpicker, who was collecting scrap paper to recycle, pulled some old da-zi-bao off the wall and happened to tear the newspaper that was posted underneath. A picture of Chairman Mao on this newspaper ripped in half. Witnessing this criminal act, Six-Fingers and his deputies immediately detained the man and took him to the police station.

Related Characters: Ji-li Jiang (speaker), Chairman Mao, Six-Fingers (Mr. Ni), Sang Hong-zhen
Page Number: 103
Explanation and Analysis:

An Yi’s grandmother was short and skinny and she tottered on her bound feet. Her husband had been a wealthy man, a capitalist. He had owned a dye factory, but he had died a long time ago. For as long as I could remember, An Yi’s grandmother had lived with her only child—An Yi’s mother, Teacher Wei, An Yi’s father, and her elder sister, who was blind. An Yi’s grandmother took care of them all. I had known her so long that I called her Grandma too.

Grandma and her sister always dressed in black. Sometimes I saw them up on the roof of their apartment, smoking a water pipe and talking together in their funny Ningbo accent. Grandma loved to give us treats.

Related Characters: Ji-li Jiang (speaker), An Yi, An Yi’s Grandmother , Teacher Wei
Page Number: 113
Explanation and Analysis:
Chapter 8: A Search in Passing Quotes

All my treasures were scattered on the floor. The butterfly fell out of its glass box; one wing was crushed under a bottle of glass beads. My collection of candy wrappers had fallen out of their notebook and were crumpled under my stamp album.

My stamp album! It had been a gift from Grandma when I started school, and it was my dearest treasure. For six years, I had been getting cancelled stamps from my friends, carefully soaking them to get every bit of envelope paper off. I had collected them one by one until I had complete sets. I had even bought some inexpensive sets with my own allowance. I loved my collection even though I knew I should not. With the start of the Cultural Revolution all the stamp shops were closed down, because stamp collecting was considered bourgeois. Now I just knew something terrible was going to happen to it.

Related Characters: Ji-li Jiang (speaker), Grandma, Six-Fingers (Mr. Ni)
Related Symbols: Stamp Album
Page Number: 135
Explanation and Analysis:

One by one I picked up all the clothes, folded them, and put them away. I picked up one of Dad’s white shirts and suddenly flushed with embarrassment and anger. My sanitary belt! It was lying on the floor, not even covered by its blue plastic bag. […]

This, of all things, was private. It was a girl’s secret. I never even let Dad or Ji-yong see it. […] Now one of those Red Guards, probably a boy, had looked at it—had held it! I felt as if I had been stripped naked in public.

[…] Wasn’t a home a private place? A place where the family could feel secure? How could strangers come through and search through our secrets? If Grandpa was a landlord, they could confiscate all his things. But I was not a landlord. Why did they have to search through my things?

Related Characters: Ji-li Jiang (speaker), Dad, Ji-yong Jiang
Related Symbols: Stamp Album
Page Number: 137-138
Explanation and Analysis:
Chapter 9: Fate Quotes

Du Hai’s mother was standing on a stool, her head lowered to her chest. Two torn shoes, the symbol of immorality, were hung around her neck, along with a sign that read, Sang Hong-Zhen, oppressor of the young, deserves ten thousand deaths. Her disheveled hair dangled around her shocked, gray face. I hardly recognized the once-powerful Neighborhood Party Committee Secretary.

A short man was standing in front of her, shouting […] “She lied to me! She told me Xinjiang was like a flower garden. […] And what did we find when we got there? Nothing! Not a damned thing! […] She fooled us into going to Xinjiang and then didn’t care whether we lived or died. Is that any way to treat a sixteen-year-old boy? While I was sick and begging for my food in Xinjiang, what was she doing here? She was running around with men and having a good time.”

Related Characters: Ji-li Jiang (speaker), Xu A-san (speaker), An Yi, Six-Fingers (Mr. Ni), Sang Hong-zhen
Page Number: 143-145
Explanation and Analysis:
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Neighborhood Dictatorship Group Term Timeline in Red Scarf Girl

The timeline below shows where the term Neighborhood Dictatorship Group appears in Red Scarf Girl. The colored dots and icons indicate which themes are associated with that appearance.
Chapter 7: The Propaganda Wall
Conformity vs. Loyalty Theme Icon
Class, Power, and Justice Theme Icon
The Power of Propaganda  Theme Icon
...the watchful eyes of Six-Fingers for “Morning Repentance” and “Evening Report.” Six-Fingers now leads the Neighborhood Dictatorship Group . The black citizens—who include Ji-li’s Aunt Xi-wen—bow before the portrait of young Mao, clutching... (full context)
Conformity vs. Loyalty Theme Icon
Class, Power, and Justice Theme Icon
...can talk about anything but the Five Black Categories—who belongs to them and why—and the Neighborhood Dictatorship Group , which keeps track of Black Categories members and reports their activities to the Neighborhood... (full context)
Chapter 16: The Incriminating Letter
Conformity vs. Loyalty Theme Icon
Identity and Individualism Theme Icon
Hard Work and Success Theme Icon
...everything else. Then she helps Grandma down the stairs to make her report to the Neighborhood Dictatorship Group . For the first time in her life, Ji-li wonders if it’s worth it to... (full context)