This article reclaims Paul Strand’s book Ghana: An African Portrait (published in the year of his death,1976) as a conflicted attempt to represent postcolonial nationhood. Comparisons with Richard Wright’s Black Power (1954) are used to open up the central problem of how to represent a post-colonial state in the making while also dealing with the author/photographer’s own difference from the subjects and subjectivities depicted. This is explored through the thematic of portraiture, of looking and being looked at, particularly in how to portray the leadership of Kwame Nkrumah and the relationship between leader and post-colonial citizen
Published versionThis article interrogates the position of Accra as an ‘extra-metropolitan’ centre f...
Black Style is a dialogue on dress and textiles associated with the African diaspora. It looks at di...
This article looks at a photographic album produced by the German police in colonial Namibia just be...
This article reclaims Paul Strand’s book Ghana: An African Portrait (published in the year of his de...
At Paul Strand’s birth in 1890, the Gold Coast was an important West African colony of the British E...
This article examines the photographs that Paul Strand made in the American Southwest between 1930-3...
The article explores the critical discourse developing in contemporary African art around issues of ...
Nkrumah’s Towards colonial freedom is a statement on the nature of colonialism and imperialism; and ...
This article explores the capacity of visual arts to deal with transnational, multidirectional proce...
Easel painting is a foreign art form whose materials and techniques were introduced by the Europeans...
This paper interrogates the image of Africa presented by Paul Theroux in his travel novel, The Lower...
The article examines three of the most important recent contributions on the historiographical debat...
This paper draws on a Kleinian psychoanalytic reading of Hegel’s theory of the struggle for recognit...
Armah’s The Beautyful Ones Are Not Yet Born has been read in terms of its political criticism of the...
The article uses the 7th São Tomé and Príncipe Biennial as a case study for exploring the intertwine...
Published versionThis article interrogates the position of Accra as an ‘extra-metropolitan’ centre f...
Black Style is a dialogue on dress and textiles associated with the African diaspora. It looks at di...
This article looks at a photographic album produced by the German police in colonial Namibia just be...
This article reclaims Paul Strand’s book Ghana: An African Portrait (published in the year of his de...
At Paul Strand’s birth in 1890, the Gold Coast was an important West African colony of the British E...
This article examines the photographs that Paul Strand made in the American Southwest between 1930-3...
The article explores the critical discourse developing in contemporary African art around issues of ...
Nkrumah’s Towards colonial freedom is a statement on the nature of colonialism and imperialism; and ...
This article explores the capacity of visual arts to deal with transnational, multidirectional proce...
Easel painting is a foreign art form whose materials and techniques were introduced by the Europeans...
This paper interrogates the image of Africa presented by Paul Theroux in his travel novel, The Lower...
The article examines three of the most important recent contributions on the historiographical debat...
This paper draws on a Kleinian psychoanalytic reading of Hegel’s theory of the struggle for recognit...
Armah’s The Beautyful Ones Are Not Yet Born has been read in terms of its political criticism of the...
The article uses the 7th São Tomé and Príncipe Biennial as a case study for exploring the intertwine...
Published versionThis article interrogates the position of Accra as an ‘extra-metropolitan’ centre f...
Black Style is a dialogue on dress and textiles associated with the African diaspora. It looks at di...
This article looks at a photographic album produced by the German police in colonial Namibia just be...