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An American college professor wrote this memoir, based on over fifty notebooks and diaries she wrote during the Cultural Revolution in China. J’s first memory of student activism ended with the death of a teacher in 1966. Thrown out of school after the first year of junior high, J made a birthday wish to complete her own education to the highest level attainable. In this success story, the Tiger Mother,
abusive father, peer competition and peer pressure are hard to find. Instead, the reader is introduced to long lists of popular books circulated underground, school systems and education reform, class privilege and class identity, women’s liberation and women’s theater, life in the countryside and deaths in the city. All is revisited through a distanced, ironic and objective Third Eye (I). Many interesting photos surprise the reader one after another. Teachers, grandmas and divorced parents would love to have the young read this book, or anyone who has a genuine interest in China would enjoy the book. With a Reading Guide, College instructors will find the book thought-provoking and refreshing to teach students across disciplines.
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An American college professor wrote this memoir, based on over fifty notebooks and diaries she wrote during the Cultural Revolution in China. J’s first memory of student activism ended with the death of a teacher in 1966. Thrown out of school after the first year of junior high, J made a birthday wish to complete her own education to the highest level attainable. In this success story, the Tiger Mother,
abusive father, peer competition and peer pressure are hard to find. Instead, the reader is introduced to long lists of popular books circulated underground, school systems and education reform, class privilege and class identity, women’s liberation and women’s theater, life in the countryside and deaths in the city. All is revisited through a distanced, ironic and objective Third Eye (I). Many interesting photos surprise the reader one after another. Teachers, grandmas and divorced parents would love to have the young read this book, or anyone who has a genuine interest in China would enjoy the book. With a Reading Guide, College instructors will find the book thought-provoking and refreshing to teach students across disciplines.