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Assignment: Shanghai: Photographs on the Eve of Revolution (Series in Contemporary Photography, 2) | 
enlarge | Creators: Orville Schell, Carolyn Wakeman, Ken Light, Jack Birns Publisher: University of California Press Category: Book
List Price: $39.95 Buy New: $13.26 You Save: $26.69 (67%)
New (14) Used (10) Collectible (1) from $9.98
Avg. Customer Rating: 1 reviews Sales Rank: 435208
Media: Hardcover Edition: 1 Number Of Items: 1 Pages: 144 Shipping Weight (lbs): 3.1 Dimensions (in): 13.3 x 9.3 x 0.8
ISBN: 0520239903 Dewey Decimal Number: 951.042 EAN: 9780520239906 ASIN: 0520239903
Publication Date: October 1, 2003 Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days Condition: new book we ship faster
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| Editorial Reviews:
Product Description Shipping out to China in December 1947 with three ten-year-old German cameras and a plum assignment from Life magazine, Jack Birns was fulfilling a boyhood dream. The reality was something else: refugees and prostitutes, soldiers and beggars, street executions and urban protests photographed in difficult and often dangerous circumstances amidst the poverty, corruption, and chaos of an expanding civil war. By then the ruling Nationalist Party had been battling the Communist threat for more than two decades, and Birns focused his camera on the human drama unfolding as war pressed ever closer to the country's financial, cultural, and commercial capital. His effort to show China's misery up close ran afoul of Time-Life publisher Henry R. Luce's fervent anti-communism, and for half a century many of these historic photographs lay unpublished in Time-Life's archives. Printed here for the first time, they offer a graphic vision of a great city, Shanghai, poised on the precipice of political revolution. Seen through the lens of hindsight, Birns's photographs give us a sense not only of what China was like more than fifty years ago, but also of why the warfare, weariness, and desperation of the time proved such fertile soil for communist revolution. Today these everyday scenes of ordinary people--pedicab drivers, street vendors, bar girls, police, politicians, prisoners--tell a story of national resilience and dignity in the midst of enveloping poverty, repression, and fear. Birns's stark black and white photographs capture the dramatic end of an era, but they also look forward, letting us glimpse how Shanghai's past prefigures the city's commercial and cultural revival in the 1990s.
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| Customer Reviews:
valuable images of a bygone era August 30, 2007 1 out of 1 found this review helpful
While very disturbing, to say the least, the pictures in this book are a necessary part of a history that remains with us. The privileged life for a few in Shanghai, contrasted with the starving masses eking out a living in their midst. Draconic measures, executions and riots, an emigre community divorced from the reality of life in China. In seeing these pictures you see the beginning of the end of a regime--to be substituted by another of unknown pedigree. But the heartening thing is that through the pain and suffering you do not see people giving up. Look at these pictures and get a shot of adrenaline!!
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