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Anjialou
The Pool of Unease is set in Anjialou, in Beijing.
It’s one of my favourite places because it is
so unlike much of Beijing, so bursting with life and
so entirely unpretty. A decade ago, it was still a village,
located where the city turned into countryside. Now
the city has advanced upon it and surrounded it, so
that if you stand in Anjialou and look in any direction,
there are high rise blocks on the horizon. Anjialou
is still a chaotic maze of alleyways and tumbledown
shacks, with people, their laundry and their kitchens,
all spilling out onto pavements. There are few Beijing
farmers here now. In many cases, the rooms have been
rented out to the migrant workers who come from the
poor countryside to do manual labour in the capital.
The wages they earn here are low, but higher than they
would earn at home on the land. The eastern end of the
street is devoted almost entirely to taxi repair workshops.
Elsewhere, there are noodle stalls and of course the
beauty salons, many of which double as massage parlours.
The village graveyard still exists, an area of woodland
next to two fishponds. Along the south shore of the
fishponds there is now a row of nightclubs and bars.
Click the images to see an enlarged version of these
images.
Lucy Cavender, a photographer living in Beijing, took
all these photographs of Anjialou. If you want to reproduce
any of these images, please contact Lucy through this
website for permission. To see some of her portraits
of writers, go to: www.beijingbookworm.com/happenings
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