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Essay On Mao's Last Dancer

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The autobiography, Mao’s Last Dancer written by Li Cunxin, is effective in raising awareness of the injustice the Chinese people experienced during Chairman Mao’s Cultural Revolution and later communist policies in China. When Li’s parents got married in 1946, they were not living in poverty. However, when the Japanese invaded China during WWII and forced all the civilians into communes, Mao then kept these communes and the Li family lost their wealth—they faced injustice and marginalisation. The Chinese population were marginalised by Mao’s use of communist principles and propaganda. They were forced into believing Mao’s views—that the West (Capitalist countries) were filthy and bad, while China was good. Li’s visit to America was an eye-opener. …show more content…

Mao was supposed to make everyone in China equal and yet Li’s family lived in poverty and there were other families such as the Chongs who lived a significantly better lifestyle. Li is exposed to all sorts of people from all sorts of backgrounds during his time at the Dance Academy. Li meets Xiongjun Chong and they form a friendship. It soon becomes clear that the Chong family did not live as Li’s family did in the commune. “I brought back some Beijing sweets and a bag of jasmine tea from the Chongs as gifts to my family, and some marbles which were an enormous hit among my brothers and friends” (pg 169). Li’s family never had sweets or jasmine tea, yet the Chongs had enough to give away to another family. When Li went to America and saw how the people from the West lived, he finds it unbelievable. “Ben spent nearly $5000 on presents in a couple of hours…My family could live on this amount for over half a century. It was shocking” (pg 277). Everything in America was so different to life in China. It was also different to how China portrayed

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