Our Past 30 Years

来源 :CHINA TODAY | 被引量 : 0次 | 上传用户:tongruanclassone
下载到本地 , 更方便阅读
声明 : 本文档内容版权归属内容提供方 , 如果您对本文有版权争议 , 可与客服联系进行内容授权或下架
论文部分内容阅读
  Stories of China’s Reform:
  A Photographer’s Personal Experiences
  Author: Liu Weibing
  Paperback, 298 pages
  Price: RMB 78
  Foreign Languages Press
  THIS year marks the 40th anniversary of China’s reform and opening-up. We recommend to our readers Stories of China’s Reform: A Photographer’s Personal Experiences, which was published five years ago. The author Liu Weibing, a reporter of Xinhua News Agency, hoped to show China’s unique history with some of the pictures he took.
  In the book, an account of historic events were recorded by Liu’s camera, such as Deng Xiaoping’s death in 1997, Hong Kong’s return to China, the 1998 floods, former Premier Wen Jiabao personally looking into the issue of withholding migrant workers’ wages, negotiations of China’s WTO entrance, and the 2008 Beijing Olympic Games.
  In addition, other phenomena such as China’s farewell to the food coupon, migrant work- ers seeking job opportunities in cities, the disappearing hutongs in Beijing, and other life scenes of ordinary people were shot and presented in the book, reflecting the earthshaking changes of the times and the process of China’s reform and opening-up.
  Liu Weibing is a member of the Chinese Writers’ Association, a member of the Chinese Photographers’ Association, and a visiting professor at the School of Journalism of the Beijing-based Renmin University of China. For many years Liu covered China’s top leaders, documenting their activities through photos. His representative works include Premier Presses for Payment of Wages for Rural Woman and Xi Jinping Picks up Glasses for Foreign Guest. He is the author of In the Forefront of War, With Lien Chan on the Mainland, and A Retrospect of the Last Two Decades – A Xinhua Photographer’s Notes. He has also published a photo album titled Impression of the Japanese.
  There are five chapters in his latest book, respectively “Stories in These Years,” “Changes in Urban and Rural Areas,” “Culture and Value Partita,” “China Is Closer to the World,” and “Experiencing Great Events.” The author has witnessed the changes firsthand, and narrates the stories with his own experience.
  In “The Disappearing Hutongs in Memories,” Liu affectionately wrote that the hutongs highlight the tradition of old Beijing and is an essential element of new Beijing. If one day Beijing’s hutongs all disappeared, nobody would believe that Beijing is a city with more than 3,000 years of architectural history and over 850 years as China’s capital.   Over the past 40 years, the biggest change in Beijing has been the city’s landscape. Since the 1990s, Beijing developed so rapidly that many places can hardly be recognized by old Beijingers. Construction sites were seen everywhere, buildings were demolished and rebuilt; roads were paved and broadened. As skyscrapers were erected one after another like bamboo shoots after a spring rain, Beijing has become more and more modern, while the time-honored alleys are shrinking. Walking around Beijing nowadays, visitors can only discover a little hint of the old Beijing at the Imperial Palace, Temple of Heaven, and the Summer Palace.
  Liu recalled that during the period from the 1970s to the 1990s, his four-member family lived in a flat house of a dozen square meters and then in a 30-square-meter apartment with no kitchen and no bathroom. It was common at the time that one hutong courtyard housed a dozen or even dozens of families.
  However, when the hutongs were set to be demolished and renovated, old residents were unwilling to leave. An octogenarian told Liu, “I am used to living here and don’t want to go anywhere else.” Staring at Liu’s camera, the elderly woman’s eyes were filled with tears. Most people who now reside in multi-story buildings still miss the good old days in their courtyard houses.
  Talking about the creation of the book, Liu said, “Without reform and opening-up, nobody knows where the country should go and what we are doing now.” Having lived through and witnessed this period of transformation, Liu said he was filled with awe and gratitude. As a reporter and photographer, he felt obliged to leave behind some valuable records of this piece of history in words and pictures for younger generations and the world.
  Liu also invited 30 friends from all walks of life to share their stories from the past 30 years in his book. Li Zhaoxing, China’s foreign minister from 2003 to 2007 and currently president of the China Association of Public Diplomacy, wrote in the preface, “The book is so dear to me – and also so new to me even though I am familiar with many events cited in it. Basing himself on a wealth of experiences he has acquired through work as a photographer at Xinhua, Weibing has written candidly to provide a true-to-life account of those epic changes that have taken place in China over the past three decades. The book throws light on the road we have followed and helps us in our understanding of the path we are to follow. It makes us proud of the progress we have made while alerting us to the need not to become self-complacent, so that we’ll be more resolved and confident in our march toward the future.”
  Editor-in-chief of Xinhua News Agency He Ping also wrote for the book’s preface, “Great changes are the key words to describe these times, particularly the 30-plus years of China’s reform and opening to the outside world. Here is what Liu Weibing, a colleague of mine at Xinhua, presents to us: the historic era of earth-shaking changes in China. Memorable journalistic works, whether in writing or in the form of photos, are invariably those that not only tell people what has happened but also what they can learn from it.”
其他文献
PERHAPS there is no term as popu- lar, yet controversial, as “sharing economy” to be the buzzword for 2017 in China. Just as the first sentence in A Tale of Two Cities by Charles Dickens, “It was the
期刊
HOW popular is “artificial intel- ligence” in China?  In China, the term artificial intelligence (AI) was included into the Report on the Work of the Government for the first time on March 5, 2017, an
期刊
IN June 2018, the 18th Meeting of the Council of Heads of Member States of the Shanghai Cooperation Organization (SCO) will be convened in Qingdao, China. This is the first summit since the organizati
期刊
WITH a round head, slightly convex forehead, and upturned corners of the mouth, the Yangtze finless porpoise, which is rarely seen now, has colloquially become known as a “smiling angel.” In 2013, it
期刊
THE official visit to China by the Minister of Education and Culture of Uruguay, María Julia Mu?oz, between April 15 and 24, reaffirmed the intentions of the Latin American country to continue expandi
期刊
Nostalgia and Home  Life Week  Issue No. 1, 2018  Well-known poet Yu Guangzhong, or Yu Kuang-chuang, passed away on December 14, 2017. He was born in China’s mainland and later moved to Taiwan. His ma
期刊
IN the report delivered at the 19th National Congress of the Communist Party of China (CPC) last October, CPC General Secretary Xi Jinping stressed the significance of promoting an ecological progress
期刊
AT nightfall, the sound of wings flapping can be heard in Longxin Organic Farm’s breeding base in Fuzhou City of Jiangxi Province. At the farm, millions of chickens leap on to pine trees. The scene is
期刊
ZIXI County of Jiangxi Province is an enclave of profuse green, with 87.3 percent of its territory covered in woods. In past years, the region has increased efforts to preserve its lush mountains to s
期刊
ACCORDING to the report delivered at the 19th National Congress of the Communist Party of China (CPC), to make new ground in pursuing opening-up on all fronts, China will not close its door to the wor
期刊