RSG Packet
RSG Packet
RSG Packet
Directions: Read Red Scarf Girl and answer the questions in complete sentences. This packet should be typed
and submitted to www.turnitin.com by 9:00am on February 28th! A copy of this packet is on my website, so
feel free to download it and type the answer after the questions. Be sure to number your answers either way!
2. At this point in the memoir, for whom do you think Ji-li feels the greatest sense of responsibility or
loyalty? Explain why.
4. Ji-li asserts, “Though we were not facing real guns or real tanks, this battle would be even harder,
because our enemies, the rotten ideas and customs we were so used to, were inside ourselves.” Do you
agree or disagree with this statement? Why or why not?
Writing Da-zi-bao
5. What are the students’ complaints about the fairness of the education system? Be specific!
6. When Ji-li is given the task of humiliating her aunt, did she have to go along with it? What other
options, if any, were available to her?
7. Ji-li claimed the da-zi-bao about her was all lies. How would someone know if the information on a
da-zi-bao was true or false?
9. Ji-li says, “I had always been a school leader, a role model. How could I have suddenly become so bad
that I needed to be remolded thoroughly?” How do you think Ji-li has changed since the beginning of
this memoir (and the beginning of the Cultural Revolution)? Do you agree with Ji-li’s opinion that she
had “become bad”? Why or why not? How do you think Ji-li’s identity is being influenced by the
context of the Cultural Revolution?
Graduation
10. Many revolutionaries thought it was unfair to assign students to the best schools solely based on
grades and teacher recommendations. Why do you think they believed this? What did they think was
the relationship between class privilege and academic achievement? Do you think any of their
arguments are relevant today?
11. Why do you think that the Chinese authorities in charge of the Cultural Revolution wanted to burn
certain books? What does burning or banning books reveal about a society? What can get a book
labeled as dangerous?
The Sound and Drums of Gongs
12. How do characters react to “the sound of drums and gongs”? How might you explain the different
responses to these searches? What was the role of the police or government authorities in the searches?
13. The Jiang family decides to fire Song Po-po. Compare the attitudes of different characters toward this
decision. Be specific!
14. At the end of this chapter, how do you think Ji-li feels about the Cultural Revolution?
16. Chairman Mao did not make many public appearances. His decision to appear at a Red Guard rally in
Beijing was significant. Mao supported the Red Guards in speeches he gave in 1966. Why do you
think he did? Why do leaders often involve youth in social change movements?
A Search in Passing
17. Ji-li says, “She doesn’t seem like a landlord’s wife,” referring to her own grandmother. What allows Ji-
li to hold misgivings about the stereotype of the landlord’s wife generated by government propaganda?
What does this moment reveal about stereotypes in general?
18. Ji-li recalls, “I wondered what I would be doing if I had been born into a red family instead of a black
one.” How might her experiences and beliefs be different if she were a member of a different family?
Fate
19. Fear and humiliation were two tools used by the Red Guards during the Cultural Revolution. Identify
moments from this chapter when these tactics were used. What impact might fear and humiliation have
on the victims? On those who witness these acts (the bystanders)?
20. During the Cultural Revolution, what aspects of Chinese society were helping to unite people? What
aspects of Chinese society were dividing people? Overall, do you think the Cultural Revolution was a
movement aimed more at bringing people together or creating divisions? Explain your answer.
Locked Up
22. In this chapter, Ji-li describes the Communist Party’s stance on confessions. What was the purpose of
these confessions?
23. How does the Jiang family resist the authorities in the Communist Party? What are the consequences
of their resistance? Do you think their actions were justified? Why or why not?
An Educable Child
24. Based on what you know about Ji-li’s school experiences, what do the leaders of the Cultural
Revolution believe is the purpose of schooling? Based on your experience as a student, what do you
think is the purpose of school?
Half-City Jiangs
25. What does the name Jiang represent to Ji-li? What does this name represent to others in the story?
What is the symbolism of Ji-li wanting to change her name?
26. Compare the behavior of Song Po-po at the end of this chapter to the behavior of Pudge on page 212.
What might explain why Song Po-po helps the Jiang family, despite their background, while Ji-li’s
classmates tease her and call her names?
28. When the foreman from Ji-li’s father’s workplace is at school to question Ji-li, he tells her, “Now, you
have to choose between two roads. You can break with your family and follow Chairman Mao, or you
can follow your father and become an enemy of the people”. To what extent do you agree with the
foreman that Ji-li must choose between only “two roads”? Can you think of any other options (or
“roads”) available to Ji-li?
30. What is the meaning of Ji-li’s dream? Why do you think she wanted to include this dream in her
memoir? What does it add to the story?
32. We learn that Ji-li’s mother “had now been classified as a landlord’s wife.” In the context of the
Cultural Revolution, what does it mean to be reclassified? What are the implications of living in a
society where the government can decide who belongs and who does not belong?
Sweeping
33. What was Ji-li’s relationship to the Cultural Revolution? Would you describe Ji-li’s character as a
perpetrator, victim, bystander, and/or upstander? Why?
34. Based on what you know about the Cultural Revolution from 1966 to 1968 (the years covered in Red
Scarf Girl ), do you think this movement was a success? What did the leaders of the Cultural
Revolution and their followers want to achieve? To what extent do you think they achieved their
goals?
Epilogue
35. Ji-li Jiang wrote this book in English for an American audience. How can this story be of value to
youth who are growing up in a different time and place? How might this book be received differently
in the United States and in China?