Li Zhensheng (photojournalist)

Li Zhensheng (photojournalist)

http://lizhensheng.blshe.com/ (Chinese)

http://www.red-colornewssoldier.com/ (English)

Li Zhensheng (Chinese: 李振盛; Pinyin: Lǐ Zhènshèng; born September 22, 1940) is a Chinese photojournalist who captured some of the most telling images from the Great Proletarian Cultural Revolution, better known as the Chinese Cultural Revolution.

His employment at the Heilongjiang Daily, which followed the party line, and his decision to wear a red arm band indicating an alliance with Chairman Mao Zedong, allowed him access to scenes otherwise only described in written and verbal accounts.

His recent publication of the book, "Red-Color News Soldier" exhibits both the revolutionary ideals 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 before he brought them to light at a photo exhibit in 1988.

Read more about Li Zhensheng (photojournalist):  Early Life, Cultural Revolution, Red-Color News Soldier