Tracing Chinese People’s Reading Memories

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  The chosen reading material of Chinese people throughout history reveals much about the era in which they lived. Since the founding of the People’s Republic of China in 1949, the places, media, content, and consumption methods of Chinese reading have changed profoundly with the times. The practice moved past paper to e-books and from renting books to collecting them. However, passion for reading and acquiring knowledge has remained consistent.


  Since it was first established in Yan’an in 1937, Xinhua Bookstore has opened branches across China and become a venue to acquire knowledge for generations of Chinese people. Pictured is a newly opened Xinhua Bookstore in Yan’an in 1954. by Hu Yue/Xinhua


  The photo shows an unmanned book stall in 1952. To make it easier for people to buy and read books, Xinhua Bookstore introduced its first unmanned bookstore in Shanghai in May 1950. All books were labeled with price, and buyers dropped money into a cash box. CFB


  This 1959 photo shows young readers asking a salesperson for books at a Xinhua children’s bookstore. by Li Shu/CFB


  Since the founding of the People’s Republic of China, Chinese people’s living standards have improved dramatically. This 1955 photo shows a Xinhua Bookstore in Beijing packed with people during a weekend. Except for a few sample books, the inventory was kept behind a counter, and customers had to ask an employee for a title. CFB


  From the 1950s to the 1980s, libraries were the primary public places to read to avoid standing in a Xinhua Bookstore. Pictured is the old National Library of China in 1950. CFB


  After the founding of the People’s Republic of China in 1949, book exchange between the National Library of China and its foreign counterparts developed fast. The library established a book exchange relationship with 135 institutions in 38 countries during the 1950s. The photo shows staff of the National Library of China organizing foreign books in 1955. by Zheng Guanghua/CFB


  The photo shows people reading at a book stall in 1956. Back then, many second-hand books about literature, science, and technology were displayed at book stalls in Beijing Dong’an flea market, which consistently attracted readers. by A. Hoffmann/CFB


  This 1972 photo shows two students reading a comic book by a river in Guilin, Guangxi Zhuang Autonomous Region. by Zi Ming/CFB


  This 1995 photo shows a bookstore at Peking University packed with customers. Newly enrolled students flooded into the bookstore to buy books and other reading materials, seeking to adapt to the intense schedule and heavy workload at Peking University, one of the country’s top institutions of higher learning. by Chen Jian/China Pictorial


  Established in 1998, the Beijing Book Building remains the largest state-owned bookstore with the most diverse offers in Beijing. To meet the new demands of readers in the internet era, it opened an online bookstore offering 160,000 titles on March 9, 1999, becoming the first Chinese bookseller to adopt digital operations. by Qi Heng/Xinhua
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