![]() |
DISCUSSION QUESTIONS The Good Earth |
![]() ![]() ![]() |
1. The novel begins with
Wang Lung's expectation of rain, the daily boiling of water for his
father, and his bathing for his wedding. What might this water imagery
foreshadow?
2. Why does Wang Lung feel compelled to purchase the rice field
from the House of Hwang? Why does he at first regret it?
3. "And so this parcel of land became to Wang Lung a sign and a
symbol." What does the author mean by this?
4. Wang Lung considers the birth of his daughter to be a bad omen.
How does he come to regard this girl, who grows up to become a fool?
5. As the family works and begs in the city, what do they think of
the foreigners they encounter? What purpose does the author serve in
including these descriptions?
6. The abundance of food in the city contrasts with the characters
impoverished lives. Discuss the emotionally complex relationship Wang
Lung develops with the city.
7. The poor laborers in the city lack knowledge even of what they
look like, a fact illustrated by the man who mocks himself in a mirror.
How does a new self-awareness come to manifest itself?
8. When Wang Lung becomes swept up with the mob and enters the rich
man's house, is the gold he receives there a curse or a blessing? Do you
feel any pity for the rich man? What do you think the author intended
you to feel?
9. After O-lan steals the jewels, do they function as a bad omen or
good luck? Why does O-lan want to keep the two pearls? Why is Wang Lung
so astonished by this? What do the pearls signify?
10. As O-lan dies, she bemoans her lack of beauty and says she is
too ugly to be loved. Wang Lung feels guilty, but still cannot love her
as he did Lotus. Neither woman can control destiny. Lotus was anorphan
who had been sold into prostitution because she was beautiful, and O-lan
had been sold as a kitchen slave because she was plain. For whom do you
feel sympathy? Why?
11. Toward the end of the novel we encounter the belief that things
will change "when the poor become too poor and the rich are too rich."
Discuss the ambivalence of this statement — a mixture of both hope and
despair — and how it reflects upon the whole of The
Good Earth.
|
Home l About Us l Features l Contact Us l Share l Submit Book |