Date post: | 30-May-2015 |
Category: |
Entertainment & Humor |
Upload: | ronald-l |
View: | 300 times |
Download: | 0 times |
BEIJING—A unit of the People's Militia waits its turn at the daily morning drill. In the background, Tien An Men Palace, where the country's leaders stand to review patriotic parades, 1958
All Photos © Henri Cartier-Bresson
SHEN-YANG, China—Workers in the industrial center are urged to produce "still bigger, still better, more quickly, more frugally," 1958.
CHONGQING, China—On the docks, men unload barges by hand; mechanized equipment had not yet been installed. Several citizens wrote letters of protest when Henri Cartier-Bresson took this
picture, claiming that his action was an insult to the Chinese people, 1958
CHINA—The Great Wall, 1958
CHINA—A unit going to work in the fields, 1958
YUMEN, China—Whatever the city, whatever the region, the sound of drums and cymbals announces a workers’ delegation marching to administration headquarters to tell of a new
high in their production, 1958
SIAN, China—As an after-school project, youngsters pave the sidewalks of their neighborhood under the supervision of their mothers, 1958
CHENGDU, China— A male nurse disinfects all who enter the city in an effort to halt an epidemic. Fearful of their well-known "facility to catch cold," the Chinese use draconian
methods to combat it, 1958
CHINA—Schoolboys rest after their daily drill. Sons of peasants, they form a militia trained in the handling of guns, hand grenades, and weapons dropped from planes. On the wall is the slogan
"Everybody loves to work," 1958
SHEN-YANG, China—Work-study programs are an integral part of Chinese university life. Here, an engineering student works a lathe, 1958
CHINA—Peasants were encouraged to construct their own smelting ovens. Every half-hour these ovens smelted about 100 pounds of iron used to make farm tools. Such labor was done
after the normal workday spent in the fields or rice paddies, 1958.
URUMCHI, China—Sinkiang Province, 1958.
TURFAN, China—A mother lays her child down for a nap. A Muslim and one of the national minorities, she works in the vineyards of a newly formed commune, 1958
SHANGHAI, China—1958
BEIJING—The extermination of China's four scourges—flies, mosquitoes, rats, and sparrows—is the theme of this exhibit, illustrated by a rat made from real rat skin, 1958
BEIJING—An exhibition on bridges and railroad systems, in the Chinese Culture Park, as an example of progress made since the Communist takeover, 1958.