Difference between revisions of "Red Scarf Girl SSR Project"

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===salon (party)===
 
===salon (party)===
  - page 16
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*Occurs on page 16
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*"They called these meeting Jiang's '''salon'''." Ji-Li, page 16
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[[Image:Answers.gif|25px]] [http://www.answers.com/salon Answers.com]
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[[Image:Encarta logo.png|25px]] [http://encarta.msn.com/dictionary_/salon.html Encarta Dictionary]
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sa·lon [ sə lón, sa láwN ] (plural sa·lons) -noun
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#grand sitting room: an elegantly furnished room in a large house where guests are received and entertained
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#social gathering of intellectuals: a regular gathering of prominent people from the worlds of literature, art, music, or politics, especially one held at the home of a wealthy woman. Salons were especially popular in the 17th, 18th, and 19th centuries.
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#place for hairdressing or beauty treatments: a commercial establishment where hairdressers or beauticians work, sometimes part of a larger store or a hotel
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#expensive clothes shop: a shop selling elegant or fashionable women's clothes, especially expensive designer clothes
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#art exhibition or gallery: an art exhibition, especially one devoted to the work of living artists, or the hall in which the exhibits are displayed
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[Late 17th century. Via French < Italian salone "large hall" < sala "hall" < Germanic]
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[[Image:Wikipedia-logo.png|25px]] [[wp:Salon (gathering)|Wikipedia]]
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:''For other uses see [[wp:salon|salon]].''
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A '''salon''' is a gathering of stimulating people of quality under the roof of an inspiring hostess or host, partly to amuse one another and partly to refine their taste and increase their knowledge through conversation and readings,  often consciously following [[wp:Horace|Horace]]'s definition of the aims of [[wp:poetry|poetry]], "to please and educate" (''aut delectare aut prodesse est'').  The salons, commonly associated with [[wp:France|French]] literary and philosophical salons of the [[wp:17th century|17th century]] and [[wp:18th century|18th century]], were carried on until quite recently in urban settings among like-minded people of a 'set': many 20th-century salons could be instanced.
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The word ''salon'' first appears in French in 1664 (from the Italian word ''sala'', used to designate the large reception hall of Italian mansions).  Literary gatherings before this were often referred to by using the name of the room in which they occurred, like ''cabinet'', ''réduit'', ''ruelle'' and ''alcôve''.  Before the end of the 17th century, these gatherings were frequently held in the bedroom (treated as a more private form of drawing room): a lady, reclining on her bed, would receive close friends who would sit on chairs or stools drawn around (this practice is even found with [[wp:Louis XIV of France|Louis XIV]]'s ''petit levée'').  The expression ''ruelle'', literally meaning "little street", designates the space between a bed and the wall in a bedroom, and more generally the entire bedroom; it was used commonly to designate the gatherings of the "[[wp:précieuses|précieuses]]", the intellectual and literary circles that formed around women in the first half of the 17th century, whose affectations were ridiculed by [[wp:Molière|Molière]].
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:''[http://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Salon_%28gathering%29&oldid=80071948 -Wikipedia "Salon (gathering)" 7 October 2006 19:14 UTC]''
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===detrimentally===
 
===detrimentally===
 
  - page 30
 
  - page 30

Revision as of 18:50, 15 October 2006

An English 10 SSR Project

Nuvola apps important.png Only a DRAFT!

May change/be updated - still in progress - may still contain inaccuracies

(need to scan directions --Plaz 20:54, 9 October 2006 (EDT))

Answers.gif Answers.com

Red Scarf Girl Cover.jpg Amazon.com

Red Scarf Girl Cover.jpg

Contents

Vocab

Glorious Cultural Revolution

  • Occurs on page 1 and throughout the book
  • "We thanked heaven that Chairman Mao had started this Cultural Revolution, and that the Central Committee of the Communist Party had uncovered this mess in our schools." Ji-Li, page 38

Answers.gif Answers.com

communism

  • Occurs on page 1 and throughout the book
  • "We thanked heaven that Chairman Mao had started this cultural revolution, and that the Central Committee of the Communist Party had uncovered this mess in our schools." Ji-Li, page 38

Answers.gif Answers.com

Chairman Mao

  • Occurs on page 3 and throughout the book
  • "Anyone who sees Chairman Mao is the happiest person in the world." Chinese saying, page 107

Answers.gif Answers.com

Red Guards

  • Occurs on page 133 and throughout the book
  • "The Red Guards are going to search your home in passing!" Six-Fingers, page 133

Answers.gif Answers.com

Young Pioneers

  • Occurs on page 3 and throughout the book
  • "We are the Young Pioneers, successors to Communism. Our red scarves flutter on our chest." Young Pioneer Song, page 3

Answers.gif Answers.com

da-dui-zhang

  • Occurs on page 9 and throughout the book
  • "I was an Outstanding Student, an Excellent Young Pioneer, and even the da-dui-zhang,' the student chairman of the whole school." Ji-Li, page 9

Answers.gif Answers.com

Zeno's Paradox

  • Occurs on page 13
  • "... [Dad] explained Zeno's paradox and the infinite series. We thought Dad kenw everything." Ji-Li, page 13

Answers.gif Answers.com

salon (party)

  • Occurs on page 16
  • "They called these meeting Jiang's salon." Ji-Li, page 16

Answers.gif Answers.com

detrimentally

- page 30

da-zi-bao

- page 39

oleander

- 

Meniere's disease

- page 180 -

yuan

- page 84

Qian-long period

- page 249

Summary

Ji-Li Jiang survived red China's Glorious Cultural Revolution; possibly Chairman Mao's biggest mistake. Ji-Li's world is turned upside down by the insatiable quest of her peers to eradicate the four-olds from society. Old ideas, old customs, old culture, and old habits are holding back China from its strong socialist future. Pants with legs narrower than 9 inches were just cut off on the streets. Pointed shoes were considered taboo. The Good Fortune Photo Studio was too èlite; it was renamed the Proletarian Photo Studio. Profit making and capitalism were strictly forbidden and frowned upon. Ji-Li suffers because her grandpa was a landowner. Land owners were seen as exploitative of the lower class. For 12 years, Ji-Li lived a comfortable life in a mid-sized apartment. But now, any inequality in wealth between people must be removed. Ji-Li is forced to avoid her somewhat-affluent past. Ji-Li's father and mother fire their servant, burn their decorative clothes, and repaint their mahogany furniture. They know that the Red Guards are on the patrol for rouge citizens who do not remold their ideologies and extinguish their former wealth.

Ironically, the guards leading the way are no other then Ji-Li's peers. Those that did not do well at school, now discover their power as members of the Young Pioneers. Ji-Li, a straight honor student, must cope with the reversal of power in the classroom. The students rebel against the teachers, driving them out of school and eroding the typical respect they had for their elders. They even go as far as accusing the teachers of poisoning their minds. For example, they had corrupted a young revolutionary by buying him bread when he did not have a lunch. Ji-Li, as an honor student, is saddened and tries to support the teachers. Her position is frowned upon by her friends. But when the students accuse her of a relationship with a male teacher, Ji-Li fears for her personal safety, and tries to distance herself from the rest of the group, leaving her open to even more accusations of being a counterrevolutionary.

Being a counterrevolutionary was dealt with very harshly and fiercely during Ji-Li's time. Groups of people went around ransacking homes and searching people in the streets to try and find any evidence of resisting Chairman Mao and his cultural revolution. Unfortunately, there were not actually very many people plotting against the government, if any in Ji-Li's town. Therefore they accuse people of treason for even the smallest of crimes. A trash man is arrested for accidentally tearing a picture of Chairman Mao while removing scrap papers.

Ji-Li's life is also made hard because she has landlord grandparents. The Red Guards want Ji-Li to break all ties with her family and become a new person. Ji-Li is torn between the family she loves and her future in politics. The decision is easy for some students in her class. But when Ji-Li's father is arrested for interrogation, Ji-Li must make the big decision affecting her entire future. Does she renounce and accuse her father of crimes that he did not commit, or should she seal her fate as a counterrevolutionary forever, thereby subjecting her to forced labor and "study" sessions for the rest of her life?