Li Zhensheng
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Li Zhensheng (born September 22, 1940) is a Chinese photojournalist who captured some of the most telling images from the Great Proletarian Cultural Revolution, or better known as the Chinese Cultural Revolution.
His employment at the Heilongjiang Daily, a turned-propaganda newspaper during the revolution, and his decision to wear a red arm band indicating an alliance with Chairman Mao Zedong, allowed him a rare access to scenes which have since been only described in written and verbal accounts.
His recent publication of the book, "Red-Color News Soldier" exhibits in vivid detail both the prolific nature of revolutionary ideals in China and, more notably, many of the atrocities that occurred during the Cultural Revolution. The Heilongjiang Daily newspaper had a strict policy in accordance with a government dictate that only "positive" images could be published, which consisted mostly of smiling revolutionaries offering praise for Chairman Mao. The "negative" images, which depicted the atrocities of the time, were hidden beneath a floorboard in his house where they sat for over 40-years before he would bring them to public light at a photo exhibit in 1988.
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[edit] Early life
Li Zhensheng was born to a poor family in Dalian, which is located in the northeastern province of Liaoning, China. At the time of his birth this was Kwantung Leased Territory, where Japan occupied the tributary state Manchukuo. His mother died when he was three, and his older brother, who was a member of Mao's army, was killed during the Chinese Civil War. Zhensheng helped his father, who was a cook on a steamship and later as a farmer, until Zhensheng was 10-years-old.
Zhensheng quickly rose to the top of his class despite starting school late. He later earned a spot at the Changchun Film School, where he acquired much of his photographic knowledge. In 1963, he briefly achieved a job at the Heilongjiang Daily, however the Socialist Education Movement soon intervened and he ended up back in the countryside for nearly two years, living with peasants and studying the work of Chairman Mao.
[edit] Cultural Revolution
Zhensheng returned to Harbin just months before the outbreak of the Great Proletarian Cultural Revolution in the spring of 1966. A lack of photographic film, marauding Red Guards, and a political dictate against photographing the negative aspects of the revolution, reduced Zhensheng to nothing more than a propaganda functionary. Although, he quickly realized that only people wearing the red-colored arm band of the Red Guards could photograph without harassment. To achieve this, he founded his own small rebel group at the newspaper.
In his access, Zhensheng captured some of the most horrific acts of the Cultural Revolution. Among his collection include photos depicting several dehumanizing tactics used by the Red Guards to humiliate or degrade alleged counterrevolutionaries. Some of the images depict public displays of "denunciations," where the hair of prominent individuals is shaved in a disheveled manner. Other images show people bearing "dunce" hats; people with black paint spread over their faces; others wearing signs around their necks with writings that critize their profession or names; and probably most horrifying, Zhensheng captured scenes of public executions of counterrevolutionaries who were never given a trial for their alleged crimes.
At the height of the Cultural Revolution, Zhensheng was plotted against by rivals, publicly denounced, and once more sent back to the countryside in September 1969. He was sent to the May 7th Cadre School in Liuhe, a Chinese gulag where he and his wife, Zu Yingxia, spent two years performing hard labor.
Zhensheng had taken meticulous care of the documented "negative" images he captured while at the newspaper, hiding them beneath a floorboard of his one-room apartment. He attributes the dry atmosphere and mild temperatures of Harbin to the preservation of the photographic negatives. While he was sent away, Zhensheng entrusted a friend to care for the apartment, and instructed him to never reveal the secrets it contained. Zhensheng returned to the newspaper in 1972 as the head of the photography department, and later became a professor at the University of Beijing in 1982.
[edit] Red-Color News Soldier
Red-Color News Soldier is a literal translation of the Chinese characters written on the armband Li Zhensheng wore during the Chinese Cultural Revolution. Although, he admits he never personally gave his alliance to Chairman Mao Zedong, wearing the arm band gave him unprecedented access to historic events, which have since shaped Chinese culture.
The book generally covers an era just before the Cultural Revolution in 1964 to just after in 1976. It is separated into five chronological sections: 1964-1966 titled "It is right to rebel"; 1966 titled "Bombard the Headquarters"; 1966-1968 titled "The Red Sun in our hearts"; 1968-1972 titled "Revolution is not a dinner party"; and 1972-1974 titled "Die Fighting."
Zhensheng's "negative" pictures (those which depicted the atrocities of the cultural revolution) were first revealed publicly in March 1988 at a Chinese Press Association's photography competition in Beijing. The show, entitled "Let History Tell the Future" was comprised of twenty images from his collection, and were deemed "counterrevolutionary" under the political dictates of Chairman Mao Zedong. Some of the images included the former governor of Heilongjiang Province having his hair brutally torn out at a Red Guard rally as a part of dehumanizing humiliation practice. Chinese Communist Party-controlled newspapers for the first time were seen to use term "shocked" in their headlines.
In December of that same year, Zhensheng met an instrumental figure in the creation of Red-Colored News Soldier: Robert Pledge, an American who was director of Contact Press Images, an international photo agency. When the two met they agreed to work together to someday bring out Zhensheng's photographic work, however they both agreed it would be in the best interest to wait until the political climate was right.
Seven months later, in June 1989, the brutal events of Tiananmen Square made world-wide headlines, and Zhensheng became determined to produce a book to show the world the images from the Cultural Revolution.
Work on the book officially began in 1999 and over the next four years a tedious process of editing had taken place. Robert Pledge did not speak Chinese, and Zhensheng did not speak English. So the two had to coordinate work through the use of translators — many of whom became integral parts of their relationship.
Zhensheng sent over 30,000 brown envelopes to Pledge's office in New York City, each containing photographic negatives from his time at the Heilongjiang Daily. The pair often engaged in heated discussions over the editing process of the photographs in the collection.
A number of the images contained self-portraits of Zhensheng. This was the result of always returning to the paper with one extra frame on the film roll; a photojournalism technique of always being prepared to cover a breaking news event at the last minute. Zhensheng would "burn off" the last image with a photo of himself shortly before developing the film. Oftentimes the poses were humorous and playful. One such image of Zhensheng exposing his bare chest was published in the book. He said he was attempting to recreate the old expression of "baring one's chest" in the face of adversity, or in his case, communism.
During book tours Zhensheng always makes a point to speak of his Chinese patriotism, or more specifically, his love for China. He says while he disagrees with the government, he still loves his country and hopes democracy will perhaps prevail in the long-term future. He does not believe his images or the book should be considered anti-Chinese, rather a reminder of the painful past which most countries endure during their evolution.