This article looks at a photographic album produced by the German police in colonial Namibia just before World War I. Late 19th- and early 20th-century police photography has often been interpreted as a form of visual production that epitomized power and regimes of surveillance imposed by the state apparatuses on the poor, the criminal and the Other. On the other hand police and prison institutions became favored sites where photography could be put at the service of the emergent sciences of the human body—physiognomy, anthropometry and anthropology. While the conjuncture of institutionalized colonial state power and the production of scientific knowledge remain important for this Namibian case study, the article explores a slightly differe...
The pervasiveness of images of black women’s unclothed bodies in the Portuguese colonial visual arc...
The law as a means of sociopolitical control in colonial states has gained significance as an issue ...
This article explores invisibility and the unseen, as well as presence and visibility, in relation t...
This article looks at a photographic album produced by the German police in colonial Namibia just be...
Rizzo L. Policing the image: the Breakwater prison albums, Cape Town, in the late nineteenth and ear...
This essay is concerned with photographs produced in the context of applying for and issuing passpor...
To work with images of atrocity is a fraught project. Sedimented constructs shaped through racist an...
This paper traces the origins of photography as a visual genre. It goes ahead to discuss the introdu...
Throughout the apartheid era, South Africa maintained a wide-reaching propaganda apparatus. At its c...
There is an awkward tension in the fact that the danger of looking at secretive things is inherent i...
Bodies of Evidence is a study of the transnational optics of anti-blackness across German and U.S. s...
This paper traces the origins of photography as a visual genre. It goes ahead to discuss the introdu...
Taking Santu Mofokeng’s The Black Photo Album as a starting point indicative of the medium’s multipl...
Dissertation (MA (Visual Arts))--University of Pretoria, 2019.This study analyses a northern-Sotho p...
This thesis engages with the ongoing debate regarding how photographs can co...
The pervasiveness of images of black women’s unclothed bodies in the Portuguese colonial visual arc...
The law as a means of sociopolitical control in colonial states has gained significance as an issue ...
This article explores invisibility and the unseen, as well as presence and visibility, in relation t...
This article looks at a photographic album produced by the German police in colonial Namibia just be...
Rizzo L. Policing the image: the Breakwater prison albums, Cape Town, in the late nineteenth and ear...
This essay is concerned with photographs produced in the context of applying for and issuing passpor...
To work with images of atrocity is a fraught project. Sedimented constructs shaped through racist an...
This paper traces the origins of photography as a visual genre. It goes ahead to discuss the introdu...
Throughout the apartheid era, South Africa maintained a wide-reaching propaganda apparatus. At its c...
There is an awkward tension in the fact that the danger of looking at secretive things is inherent i...
Bodies of Evidence is a study of the transnational optics of anti-blackness across German and U.S. s...
This paper traces the origins of photography as a visual genre. It goes ahead to discuss the introdu...
Taking Santu Mofokeng’s The Black Photo Album as a starting point indicative of the medium’s multipl...
Dissertation (MA (Visual Arts))--University of Pretoria, 2019.This study analyses a northern-Sotho p...
This thesis engages with the ongoing debate regarding how photographs can co...
The pervasiveness of images of black women’s unclothed bodies in the Portuguese colonial visual arc...
The law as a means of sociopolitical control in colonial states has gained significance as an issue ...
This article explores invisibility and the unseen, as well as presence and visibility, in relation t...