Lijia Zhang worked as a teenager in a factory producing missiles designed to reach North America, queuing every month to give evidence to the period police that she wasn’t pregnant. In the oppressive routine of guarded compounds and political meetings, Zhang’s disillusionment with The Glorious Cause drove her to study English,
which strengthened her intellectual independence from bright, western style clothes, to organizing the largest demonstration by Nanjing workers in support of the Tiananmen Square protest in 1989. By narrating the changes in her own life, Zhang chronicles the momentous shift in China’s economic policy: her factory, still an ICBM manufacturer, won the bid to cast a giant bronze Buddha as the whole country went mad for profit.
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