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1[[quoteright:326:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/be462d8bd35a660a9e9e14753bba7307.jpg]]
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3''Wild Swans: Three Daughters of China'' is a family history which recounts the experiences of three generations of author Jung Chang's family through the turbulent events of 20th-century UsefulNotes/{{China}} - from the grandmother given as a concubine to a warlord, to the mother growing up under Japanese occupation and joining the Communists, to finally the author herself, Er-hong ("Jung"), who in the wake of the ordeals brought on by the UsefulNotes/CulturalRevolution eventually turns against the cult of UsefulNotes/MaoZedong and finds a new life in Britain.
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5The book became an international bestseller when it was originally published in 1991, and has been translated into 37 languages, but is still BannedInChina.
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7!!This work contains examples of:
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9* AllIssuesArePoliticalIssues: During the Cultural Revolution, even traffic signs become politicized.
10-->Traffic was in confusion for several days. For red to mean "stop" was considered impossibly counter revolutionary. It should of course mean "go." And traffic should not keep to the right, as was the practice, it should be on the left.
11%%* AsianAndNerdy: Jin-ming.
12* BodyHorror: Jung describes how her grandmother still underwent foot binding before this was banned. As she came home after hours of walking in agony and pain she would sit down and start taking care of her wounds.
13* BookBurning: Oh so very much during the Cultural Revolution. Jung's father is forced to burn some of his beloved books personally. That's [[OOCISSeriousBusiness the first time she sees him cry.]]
14* ChildSoldiers: De-hong becomes a courier for the Communists during the civil war, despite still being a schoolgirl. Her assignments range from hiding banned literature to delivering explosive charges.
15* FamilyThemeNaming: The character pronounced "hong" (meaning "[[TitleDrop wild swan]]") is used in the names of several female members of Chang's family, starting with her mother.
16* FashionHurts: Jung's grandmother still lived through the centuries old practice of female foot binding, but her daughter was lucky that the practice was banned from 1912 on.
17* InsaneTrollLogic: The various logical contortions of the communists used to denounce anyone who falls from favour - at one point, a person reading the works of Creator/KarlMarx is accused of "bourgeois intellectualism".
18* MarriedToTheJob: In the early years of the Communist regime, it was explicitly required for Party officers (like Jung's father) to put their jobs before their families.
19* MayDecemberRomance: Yang Yu-fang and Dr Xia marry despite a forty year age gap and the protests of the latter's family.
20* MeaningfulRename: Jung Chang's name was originally Er-hong (meaning "Second Swan"), but when she realized that it sounds like "faded red", she asked her father to give her a new name that has "a military ring to it". He suggested "Jung", which is an ancient word for "martial affairs".
21* MindRape: The prison authorities use Chang Shou-yu's schizophrenia to their advantage by exacerbating the delusions he suffers from as a form of torture (e.g. convincing him his wife is in the next room, denouncing him). When he is eventually released, he alternates between an AngstComa and fits of rage.
22* NoHoldsBarredBeatdown: A favorite tactic of the Red Guards, many brigades of whom are indistinguishable from street gangs, during the Cultural Revolution.
23* NoPartyLikeADonnerParty: During the famine caused by the Great Leap Forward, there are cases of children kidnapped, murdered and eaten.
24* NumericalThemeNaming: Jung's great-grandmother had the name "Second Daughter".
25* SadistTeacher: Some of the Japanese teachers during the occupation qualify, but the trope is averted by kindhearted Ms. Tanaka.
26* ShedTheFamilyName: Many relatives of denounced persons disown them publicly by changing their family names.
27* SmallSecludedWorld: Jung remembers how people told her lies that people in the capitalist countries were living in far worse ways than them. She was frightened of foreigners and her image as a child was that all of the men were men with "red, unkempt hair, strange-colored eyes, a very very long nose, stumbling around drunk, pouring Coca-Cola into his mouth from a bottle, with his legs splayed out in a most inelegant position". She was also intrigued by the word "hello", which foreigners always said, with an odd intonation, yet didn't know what it meant. Back then she assumed it was a swear word.

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