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  • Published: 1 April 2010
  • ISBN: 9780670080915
  • Imprint: Viking
  • Format: Hardback
  • Pages: 500
  • RRP: $80.00
Categories:

Shanghai: A History in Photographs, 1842 - Today




Shanghai is a visual history that tells the story of modern China as witnessed by this romantic city.  The end of the Opium Wars in 1842 effected a dramatic transformation, turning a sleepy backwater into a bustling treaty port.  Over the intervening 160 years, Shanghai has been shaped by outside forces - foreign concessions, Japanese invasions, the arrival of the Communists and the cult of Mao, they have all played their part in sculpting today's Shanghai.
China's turbulent history is traced through Shanghai's evocative, beautiful, and sometimes painful images.  As we reach the present day with its helter-skelter development, lavish wealth is juxtaposed against grinding poverty, and documented through the lenses of Shanghai's most important contemporary artists.
Told through rare official archive photographs, images taken from private collections, new commissions, and co-author Liu Heung Shing's own work, Shanghai is the definitive history of the most beautiful of China's cities.  Shanghai will be available in both hardcover and paperback, and will be for sale inside the Shanghai hall of the World Expo 2010.

  • Published: 1 April 2010
  • ISBN: 9780670080915
  • Imprint: Viking
  • Format: Hardback
  • Pages: 500
  • RRP: $80.00
Categories:

About the authors

Liu Heung Shing

Liu Heung Shing was born in Hong Kong in 1952, and is a photojournalist with a career spanning more than twenty years. In 1992, Liu became the first ethnic Chinese person to win a Pulitzer Prize, sharing it for his coverage of the collapse of the Soviet Union. With international assignments for the Associated Press and Time magazine to his name, Liu is the author of China After Mao (Penguin, 1983) and China: Portrait of a Country (Taschen, 2008).

Karen Smith

Karen Smith is a Beijing-based British art historian, specializing in contemporary Chinese art of the post-Mao era. She is the author of Ai Weiwei (Phaidon, 2009) and is currently finishing her forthcoming book, Bang to Boom: Chinese Art in the 1990s.