Students snap villagers to record rural lives

By Zou Shuo | China Daily | Updated: 2022-09-27 08:40
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Villager Wang Qinze and her granddaughter are seen in a photo taken by the students. [Photo provided to China Daily]

Kindness, passion

The village does not have a photographic studio, and the villagers hardly had any previous opportunities to sit for photos, Zhang said.

"Throughout the days of the shoot, I was moved by their smiling faces as I could read their pure kindness and passion for life," Zhang said. "Never before had I felt the vitality of such photography."

The students managed to take a handful of photos of every villager. Some shots captured their daily lives, while more formal pictures were portraits for use after they die, she said.

Although the students could not understand the villagers' dialect very well, the locals were happy to talk with them, and many offered dates and other local specialties, she said.

Zhang said she lived in the countryside in Yunnan province with her grandparents when she was small, but it would be difficult for her to return there frequently as she will probably find a job in a big city.

Only a handful of students in Yunnan can be enrolled at PKU every year, she said, adding that she felt that getting a master's from the university would be something of a waste if she simply returned to her hometown afterward.

Liang Qin, an undergraduate at the school, said that she has photographed many people since the beginning of the year, but no one touched her as much as the villagers did.

The experience in the village changed her understanding of photography. "With them sitting in the makeshift studio, I found that photography has more to do with the people and less to do with technique, applying makeup or dressing up in nice clothes," she said.

"The seniors had little experience of having their picture taken and they would stare at me in confusion. I tried to speak some of the local dialect to soothe and comfort them, telling them 'Smile!' or 'Pretty good!'

"For the first time in my life, I was moved by the photos I took. Looking through those photos, I found the villagers in them were particularly photogenic." Taking the photos made her think of her parents and grandparents in her hometown in Hunan province, she said.

"Seeing how lonely the villagers can be without their children nearby, I do not want my parents to be left behind in my hometown when they get older, so I will try to find work in places near my hometown when I graduate," she said, adding that young people have a responsibility to contact their elderly relatives as often as possible.

Zhao Kun, who graduated from PKU in 2020 and is now an official in Nihegou, said the photos are particularly moving because each villager has lived a fruitful life, and their faces and wrinkles represent the resilience of ordinary Chinese people who never bow down to hardships.

Having worked in the village for eight months, he does not feel that it is a waste of talent for graduates from famous universities to work in remote places.

"While I have learned 'book knowledge' and theories and heard lectures by famous professors, working in the village has enabled me to learn 'social knowledge' and solve the problems real people face," he said.

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