![]() |
|
Photo provided to chinadaily.com.cn |
Li Jianxing in Bozhou, Anhui province, is 85 years old. He recalls the hardest days in his life were when he was denounced as a rightist in 1957. "Before that (the anti-rightist campaign), I was a deputy manager in a State-run photo studio, with a monthly salary of 45 yuan ($7.26). After I was denounced, my salary was cut to 23 yuan.
“Life became so difficult that I had to give away one of my children. After I was rehabilitated by the government in the late 1970s, I wrote to the family who adopted my child, I wanted my child back, because I could afford to feed him. Eventually, he returned to me."
After 1956, when China initiated the joint State-private ownership policy--the principal form of state capitalism adopted during the socialist transformation of capitalist enterprises in China--most of the photographers in the book worked for State-owned photo studios in their hometowns.
This is an aging population, Wang says, and "it means I am in a race against time to collect their stories. They are old. Some are passing away. In fact, death has taken a few shortly after I interviewed them."