The photographic implement, from the earliest days of its invention in Europe, in 1839, has been used to document events considered as real. However, notions of ‘reality’ could be ambiguous as objects or sceneries intended to be photographed are sometimes constructed to represent an imagined stereotypical reality. In South Africa, as well as in other parts of Africa, earliest documented photographs of indigenous peoples, by many Europeans, usually depicted cultures that were ancient and, in their opinion, needed to be studied. Photography however, was subsequently used by the apartheid government in South Africa to control movement of blacks through identity (passport) photographs that classified people based on race. It eroded the dignity ...
Apartheid may have ended in South Africa in 1991, but the people still struggle with the effects and...
In the early 1950s Bryan Heseltine made a striking series of photographs in a number of townships an...
This article looks at a photographic album produced by the German police in colonial Namibia just be...
The photographic implement, from the earliest days of its invention in Europe, in 1839, has been use...
Magister Artium - MAThis mini-thesis attempts to analyse the way in which Van Kalker photographs ena...
Magister Artium - MAThis mini-thesis explores the role of photography in the mainstream and dissiden...
This thesis engages with the ongoing debate regarding how photographs can co...
This research report examines the notion of the photographic document as subjective register in con...
Includes bibliographical references.The eponymous collection of 64 photographs accompanying this tex...
This paper traces the origins of photography as a visual genre. It goes ahead to discuss the introdu...
This study is divided into five sections. The introductory section briefly examines how South Africa...
This essay is concerned with photographs produced in the context of applying for and issuing passpor...
Thesis (PhD)--Stellenbosch University, 2016.ENGLISH ABSTRACT: Contemporary Afrikaner ethnic identity...
In this article, I look at the “ordinary” (or “everyday”) archive of the racially oppressed, viewin...
Throughout the apartheid era, South Africa maintained a wide-reaching propaganda apparatus. At its c...
Apartheid may have ended in South Africa in 1991, but the people still struggle with the effects and...
In the early 1950s Bryan Heseltine made a striking series of photographs in a number of townships an...
This article looks at a photographic album produced by the German police in colonial Namibia just be...
The photographic implement, from the earliest days of its invention in Europe, in 1839, has been use...
Magister Artium - MAThis mini-thesis attempts to analyse the way in which Van Kalker photographs ena...
Magister Artium - MAThis mini-thesis explores the role of photography in the mainstream and dissiden...
This thesis engages with the ongoing debate regarding how photographs can co...
This research report examines the notion of the photographic document as subjective register in con...
Includes bibliographical references.The eponymous collection of 64 photographs accompanying this tex...
This paper traces the origins of photography as a visual genre. It goes ahead to discuss the introdu...
This study is divided into five sections. The introductory section briefly examines how South Africa...
This essay is concerned with photographs produced in the context of applying for and issuing passpor...
Thesis (PhD)--Stellenbosch University, 2016.ENGLISH ABSTRACT: Contemporary Afrikaner ethnic identity...
In this article, I look at the “ordinary” (or “everyday”) archive of the racially oppressed, viewin...
Throughout the apartheid era, South Africa maintained a wide-reaching propaganda apparatus. At its c...
Apartheid may have ended in South Africa in 1991, but the people still struggle with the effects and...
In the early 1950s Bryan Heseltine made a striking series of photographs in a number of townships an...
This article looks at a photographic album produced by the German police in colonial Namibia just be...