大象传媒

In pictures: Zambia's new generation

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Photographer Kerstin Hacker's pictures document the rapid pace of change in Lusaka, capital of Zambia.

Image source, Kerstin Hacker
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Fast-food restaurants, such as the South African chain Hungry Lion, have become popular with a young urban population

She sets out to document the everyday life of affluent inhabitants in the rapidly developing urban centres in a country where a large proportion of population is under 35.

Image source, Kerstin Hacker
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Nathan Malambo, a promising young skateboarder, at Paark Xtreme

"What strikes me about Zambia is that there is such ambition in the country," Hacker, a senior lecturer at the UK's Anglia Ruskin University, says.

"Young people everywhere are working towards building their future. While some of them make small steps, others move fast.

Image source, Kerstin Hacker
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Back stage at a fashion show during a urban youth festival at Nadec sports complex

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Local designer Chisala Musasha prepares a model for a photo shoot

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A construction site for the Love of Home Chinese homeware store, in Kalingalinga

Image source, Kerstin Hacker
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Expensive cars are a status symbol for the Zambian middle classes and car washes are used to network by new entrepreneurs

Image source, Kerstin Hacker
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Workers return empty trolleys from the car park of the Manda Hill Shopping Mall

Image source, Kerstin Hacker
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A "groomsman" performs a traditional choreographed dance at a wedding in an affluent hotel

Image source, Kerstin Hacker
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Two sisters waiting for their ballet class to begin in a gym

Image source, Kerstin Hacker
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Sunday service at the Evangel Baptist Church

Kerstin Hacker is exhibiting a new project; the Stories of Kalingalinga, a collaboration with the National Zambian Visual Arts Council and a group of Zambian photographers, opening on 16 January 2020 in the Ruskin Gallery, Cambridge.

All photographs copyright Kerstin Hacker