Son of the Revolution Literary Elements

Son of the Revolution Literary Elements

Genre

Autobiography

Setting and Context

Primarily China under Mao Zedong during the Cultural Revolution

Narrator and Point of View

Through the point of view of Liang Heng.

Tone and Mood

Violent, Oppressive, Mysterious, Revelatory, Revolutionary, and Energetic

Protagonist and Antagonist

Heng (Protagonist) vs. Mao's Communist Party (Antagonist)

Major Conflict

Heng and his family's struggle to survive Mao's violent Cultural Revolution.

Climax

When Heng escapes to America.

Foreshadowing

Heng foreshadows his escape early on in the book.

Understatement

The depravity of Mao's lieutenants are understated in sections of the book.

Allusions

To the history and geography of China and the United States, popular culture, Heng's family history, religion, and mythology.

Imagery

Heng uses intense imagery to underscore the depravity of Mao's actions.

Paradox

The Cultural Revolution was responsible for the deaths and oppression of countless Chinese people, yet many willingly accepted that.

Parallelism

Heng's story and the story of countless other Chinese people are paralleled often in the book.

Metonymy and Synecdoche

N/A

Personification

China as a country is personified in the book.

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