Red Scarf Girl

Red Scarf Girl

by

Ji-li Jiang

Themes and Colors
Conformity vs. Loyalty Theme Icon
Class, Power, and Justice Theme Icon
The Power of Propaganda  Theme Icon
Identity and Individualism Theme Icon
Hard Work and Success Theme Icon
LitCharts assigns a color and icon to each theme in Red Scarf Girl, which you can use to track the themes throughout the work.
Class, Power, and Justice Theme Icon

Ji-li Jiang lives in a rigidly hierarchal society. The class system the Chinese Communist Party puts in place is just as rigid as the one from which it allegedly freed the Chinese people—only now working-class laborers and those who show Party allegiance are on top instead of wealthy people. Thus, because Ji-li’s grandfather was a landlord and her dad resigned from the Party, she belongs to the black class—the lowest rank. In contrast, her classmates Du Hai, Yang Fan, and Yin Lan-lan all come from working-class backgrounds and are thus considered red, or members of the most privileged class. These class distinctions become starker during the Cultural Revolution, during which anyone considered black faces discrimination, coercion, and violence.

But a system where power comes from class and where class is defined by shifting, often unclear labels easily becomes corrupt. Red Guards and the newspapers declare more and more things Four Olds each month. Former members of the powerful class, like Neighborhood Party Committee Secretary Sang Xie-wen, or even Chairman Mao’s former second-in-command Liu Shao-qi, find themselves reclassed and ousted from their positions. When Thin-Face reclassifies Dad as a landlord and forces Mom and Grandma to register as official landlords’ wives, he permanently assigns the Jiang family to the social and political underclass. By tracing the many ways that the Cultural Revolution exacerbated class strife, the book claims that hierarchal class systems policed by the masses encourage abuse. Only when a government uses an impartial standard to judge its people by their actions rather than their class standing can a free and fair society flourish.

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Class, Power, and Justice Quotes in Red Scarf Girl

Below you will find the important quotes in Red Scarf Girl related to the theme of Class, Power, and Justice.
Chapter 1: The Liberation Army Dancer Quotes

Song Po-po told us that our extended family used to occupy two whole buildings, ten rooms all together. “Then they all moved away, and only your family and your Fourth Aunt’s family were left. Your family only has one room now. It’s just too bad.” She shook her head sadly.

But I didn’t feel that way at all. I loved our top floor room. […] Our room was ten times as big as many of my classmates’ homes, and a hundred times brighter. Best of all, we had a private bathroom, a full-sized room with a sink, a toilet, and a tub. It was almost as large as some families’ entire homes. Many did not have a bathroom at all, or even a flush toilet, and very few had a full-size bathroom that they did not have to share with other families.

Related Characters: Ji-li Jiang (speaker), Song Po-po (speaker), Dad, Grandma, Mom, Ji-yong Jiang, Ji-yun Jiang , Jiang Xi-Wen, Yin Lan-lan , Yang Fan , Fourth Aunt , Mrs. Rong, Old Qian
Page Number: 16
Explanation and Analysis:
Chapter 3: Writing Da-zi-bao Quotes

Yin Lan-lan had written, “As one of its victims, I denounce the revisionist education system. Being from a working-class family, I have to do a lot more housework than students from rich families. So I have difficulty passing exams. And I was not allowed to be a Young Pioneer or to participate in school choir. The teachers think only of grades when evaluating a student. They forget that we, the working class, are the masters of our socialist society.”

“Yin Lan-lan? A victim?” I was flabbergasted. Yin Lan-lan had flunked three times. She rarely spoke up in class. When she was asked to answer a question, she would just stand there without saying a word. She was not very bright.

“She failed three courses out of five. How could she blame the teachers for that?” An Yi sneered.

Related Characters: Ji-li Jiang (speaker), An Yi (speaker), Yin Lan-lan (speaker)
Page Number: 41-42
Explanation and Analysis:
Chapter 4: The Red Successors Quotes

“My father’s class status…?” I did not see what Du Hai meant at first. “You mean what did my grandfather do? I don’t know. I only know that he died when my father was seven.”

There was a trace of a grin on Du Hai’s face. He stood up lazily and faced the class.

“I know what her grandfather was.” He paused dramatically, sweeping his eyes across the class. “He was a—LANDLORD.”

“Landlord!” The whole class erupted.

“What’s more, her father is a—RIGHTIST.”

“Rightist!” the class was in pandemonium.

I was numb. Landlord! One of the bloodsuckers who exploited the farmers! The number-one enemies, the worst of the “Five Black Categories,” even worse than criminals, or counterrevolutionaries! My grandfather? And Dad, a rightist? One of the reactionary intellectuals who attacked the Party and socialism? No, I could not believe it.

Related Characters: Ji-li Jiang (speaker), Du Hai (speaker), Dad, Grandfather
Page Number: 58
Explanation and Analysis:
Chapter 5: Graduation Quotes

The junior high school entrance examination dreaded by all of us was gone. What a relief! […]

Du Hai sat on his desk roaring with laughter. To him, and to Yin Lan-lan and to the others who were not even sure of graduating, this was wonderful news.

But as I watched Du Hai, my elation suddenly evaporated. Yes, I would have a whole summer to play. But without an entrance exam, how would they pick the students for the elite schools? Ever since third grade, I had been counting on getting into Shi-yi, one of the best junior high schools in Shanghai. Then I had planned on attending an elite high school, and then one of the famous universities. Without an entrance exam, how could I be sure of getting into Shi-yi? What could I do to make up for my family background?

Related Characters: Ji-li Jiang (speaker), Du Hai, Yin Lan-lan
Page Number: 72-73
Explanation and Analysis:
Chapter 6: The Sound of Drums and Gongs Quotes

“It seems terrible to just cut them all up. Why don’t we just give them to the theater or to the Red Guards?” Ji-yun held a gown up in front of her. She was imagining what it would be like to wear it, I knew.

“The theater doesn’t need them, and it’s too late to turn them in now. The Red Guards would say that we were hiding them and waiting for New China to fall. Besides, even if we did turn them in, the Red Guards would just burn them anyway.” Grandma looked at me and shook her head as she picked up her scissors. “I just couldn’t bear to sell them,” she said sadly. “Even when your father was in college and we needed the money.” She picked up a lovely gold-patterned robe and said softly, “This was a government official’s uniform. I remember my grandfather wearing it.”

Related Characters: Ji-li Jiang (speaker), Grandma (speaker), Ji-yun Jiang (speaker), Dad
Page Number: 96
Explanation and Analysis:
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:
Chapter 8: A Search in Passing Quotes

I sat on our usual bench […] staring at the fleecy white clouds. […]

In the three months since the Cultural Revolution had started, changes had been so constant that I often felt lost. One day the Conservative faction were revolutionaries that defended Chairman Mao’s ideas; the next day, the opposite Rebel faction became the heroes of the Cultural Revolution. I heard that even Chairman of the Nation Liu Shao-qi and General Secretary Deng Xiao-ping were having problems. […]

I wondered what I would be doing if I had been born into a red family […] I hated my grandfather [… but] I did know if I could hate Grandma if she was officially classed as a landlord’s wife. The harder I tried to figure things out, the more confused I felt. I wished I had been born into a red family so I could do my revolutionary duties without worrying.

Related Characters: Ji-li Jiang (speaker), Dad, Grandma, Grandfather, Liu Shao-qi
Page Number: 125-126
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 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: