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Beijing 2008: A Photographic Journey

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Altar of Heaven. Photograph: Zhang Zhaoji, 1996

Altar of Heaven. Photograph: Zhang Zhaoji, 1996

Introduction

As early as 1906 an article about competitive sports in the magazine Tianjin Youth voiced Chinese aspirations to host the Olympics. The promotion of sports and physical fitness were an important part of China’s efforts to modernize and throw off the yoke of the past—one of Mao Zedong’s first published writings, for instance, was A Study of Physical Education (April 1917).

When China won the competition to host the 2008 games in July 2001, it occasioned a swell of patriotic enthusiasm that has yet to subside. Although preparations for the Olympics, especially transmission of the torch, have been questioned in the aftermath of the Sichuan earthquake, many believe they symbolize hope for the future.

Perhaps this optimism is embodied in the many unique buildings erected in Beijing, the main venue for the games. Among them, the National Stadium (called the “Bird’s Nest”), the National Aquatic Center (the “Water Cube”), the Beijing Capital International Airport Terminal 3, China Central Television’s new headquarters, and the National Center for the Performing Arts (formerly called “The National Grand Theater”) have helped transform the city into a world-class global metropolis. For a brief period in summer 2008 Beijing will be the focus of world attention.

In more than sixty photos, Beijing 2008: A Photographic Journey, displays both the city’s past and its energetic present. The exhibition includes

  • Beijing as imperial capital and its importance as a center of ritual and political life;
  • Comparisons of vintage photos from the 1930s with modern ones taken of the same sites. These include various neighborhoods and districts, parks, monuments, hutong (traditional residential lanes), and scenic areas;
  • The visionary structures built to house the 2008 Olympiad and other new additions to the city. This web-companion provides a brief introduction to some of Beijing’s important architectural sites and historically contextualizes their significance.

Links to additional web resources are provided so that readers can learn more about one of the world’s most important cities.


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General Overview

Geography

The significance of physical place that spatially situates the exhibition's content

History

The significance of historical and political periodization that temporally situates the exhibition's content

Culture and People

Human behaviors, beliefs, and customs that inform the exhibition's content

Material Culture

What the physical objects in the exhibit reveal about the socio-cultural identity of the objects' producers and possessors

Appreciation

How the exhibition's content is theoretically, economically, and morally appreciated
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