Abstract
In his fine and thought-provoking book, Visual Culture in Contemporary China: Paradigms and Shifts, Xiaobing Tang presents a short history of visual culture in China from the mid-twentieth century to the present, a period that corresponds to the entire history of the People's Republic of China. Examining an array of artwork in various media and genres, from woodblock prints and oil paintings to films, Tang strives to excavate a vital tradition of socialist visual culture in China of the past sixty years or so—a tradition that has been shaped by two major imperatives: "to create an inspirational visual environment in support of the social revolution" and "to...