2026年4月1日 星期三

The Lens of Deception: Photography as a Political Weapon

 

The Lens of Deception: Photography as a Political Weapon

If the eyes are the window to the soul, then in the hands of a totalitarian regime, the camera lens is the specialized tool used to tint that window with the precise shade of state-approved delusion. Gu Zheng’s analysis of "Photography during the Cultural Revolution" reveals a world where reality was not captured, but staged, processed, and served as a psychological sedative for the masses.

The "business model" of Cultural Revolution photography was simple: eliminate the distinction between private and public space until even a man in a bathrobe becomes a symbol of divine power. The iconic image of Mao Zedong swimming in the Yangtze in 1966 was not a candid snapshot; it was a carefully broadcasted visual threat, signaling to his political rivals that he was "vigorous" and ready to "shatter any convention". Human nature, ever susceptible to the cult of personality, was fed a diet of these "staged" realities (擺拍), designed to incite worship rather than provide information.

The cynicism deepens when we examine the photographers themselves. Professional state journalists, like those at Xinhua, claimed to be following their "conscience" while producing blatant propaganda. They utilized the "Red, Bright, and Shining" (紅、光、亮) aesthetic, ensuring that the struggle of the peasantry looked like a heroic opera rather than the grueling, often starvation-inducing reality it was. It was only through the "unskilled" lenses of students like Liu Xiaodi—who didn't know the rules of propaganda—that the true, unvarnished state of the Chinese countryside was accidentally preserved.

Ultimately, the photography of this era serves as a grim historical reminder: when the state controls the image, the truth becomes a casualty of aesthetics. We are left with archives of "moral" photographs that are factually bankrupt—a collection of beautiful lies that prove human nature would often rather believe a well-lit fantasy than face a dimly lit truth.