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Book Cover
Book
Author Wu, Ningkun.

Title A single tear : a family's persecution, love, and endurance in Communist China / Wu Ningkun in collaboration with Li Yikai
Published London : Hodder & Stoughton, [1993]
©1993

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Location Call no. Vol. Availability
 MELB  951.05092 Nin/Sta  AVAILABLE
Description xii, 367 pages ; 24 cm
Contents Prologue: How the Book Came to Be Written -- 1. The Return of a Native, 1951-52 -- 2. A Hidden Counterrevolutionary, 1953-55 -- 3. A Hundred Flowers and a Poisonous Weed, 1956-58 -- 4. The Half-Step Bridge, 1958 -- 5. A Child Born in Sorrow, 1958 -- 6. Labor Reform in the Wilderness, 1958-60 -- 7. Guilt by Association, 1958-60 -- 8. Death by Starvation, 1960-61 -- 9. Prison Visits, 1961 -- 10. Return from the Dead, 1961-66 -- 11. Swept into a Cow Shed, 1966-68 -- 12. Among Red Guards and Master Workers, 1968-70 -- 13. Reeducation by Peasants, 1969-70 -- 14. A Cow Demon at Large, 1970-73 -- 15. A Precarious Reprieve, 1974-78 -- 16. Rehabilitation Twenty-two Years After, 1979-80 -- Epilogue: Among the Dead and the Living
Summary Their will to survive and keep their family together, as well as a determination to find happiness in their homeland, remained constant throughout these difficult years. In the words of the author, this memoir was written to answer one question: "Have I suffered and survived in vain?" His answer is this intensely personal and beautifully written story that succeeds in giving a comprehensive account of the first four turbulent decades of Communist rule and offers important insights into understanding life in contemporary China. A Single Tear not only foretells such tragedies as the Tiananmen Square massacre but persists as a protest against the mistreatment of a people by its government. It is a story of suffering, but also of endurance and love. A Single Tear is an important contribution to the literature of dissident voices all over the world
Two short years after returning to China, Wu Ningkun was labeled a dangerous counter-revolutionary and an "ultrarightist" for his Western teaching methods and curriculum, which included such books as Fitzgerald's The Great Gatsby. His colleagues denounced him, and within five years of his return Wu was sent to a government farm, where he was subjected to "thought reform" through hard labor. During his first prison term, which lasted over three years, he was nearly starved to death in the famine that resulted from Mao's political campaign known as the Great Leap Forward. Over the next two decades Wu Ningkun and his wife, Li Yikai, who has collaborated with him on this extraordinary memoir, were labeled enemies of their country and separated, reunited, and relocated at the whim of an often paranoid and ever-changing Communist regime
In 1951, Wu Ningkun, who was educated in America, answered the call of his homeland, China, to serve as a professor for the new Communist government. Leaving behind a promising academic career in the States in order to put his training to work in his native country, Wu Ningkun returned home full of hope. A Single Tear is the story of what he found. It is a firsthand account of life in China from the early days of communism in the 1950s, through the cultural revolution of the late '60s and '70s, and into the '80s
Analysis China
Subject Wu, Ningkun.
Communism -- China.
SUBJECT China -- Social conditions. http://id.loc.gov/authorities/subjects/sh85024178
China -- Biography. http://id.loc.gov/authorities/subjects/sh2008114650
China -- History -- 1949- http://id.loc.gov/authorities/subjects/sh85024123
China -- History http://id.loc.gov/authorities/subjects/sh85024032 -- 1976-
China -- Politics and government -- 1949- http://id.loc.gov/authorities/subjects/sh85024174
Genre/Form Biographies.
Author Li, Yikai.
LC no. bnb34043046
ISBN 034043046X
0340603798
9780340430460