ABSTRACT

This collection explores women’s multifaceted historical and contemporary involvement in photography in Africa.

The book offers new ways of thinking about the history of photography, exploring through case studies the complex and historically specific articulations of gender and photography on the continent, and attending to the challenge and potential of contemporary feminist and postcolonial engagements with the medium. The volume is organised in thematic sections that present the lives and work of historically significant yet overlooked women photographers, as well as the work of acclaimed contemporary African women photographers such as Héla Ammar, Fatoumata Diabaté, Lebohang Kganye and Zanele Muholi. The book offers critical reflections on the politics of gendered knowledge production and the production of racialised and gendered identities and alternative and subaltern subjectivities. Several chapters illuminate how contemporary African women photographers, collectors and curators are engaging with colonial photographic archives to contest stereotypical forms of representation and produce powerful counter-histories.

Raising critical questions about race, gender and the history of photography, the collection provides a model for interdisciplinary feminist approaches for scholars and students of art history, visual studies and African history.

chapter 1|19 pages

New Lines of Sight

Perspectives on women and photography in Africa

part I|60 pages

Writing women into photographic histories

chapter 2|22 pages

A Working Woman’s Eye

Anne Fischer and the South African photography of Weimar women in exile

chapter 3|17 pages

Curating Images, Performing Narratives

Women and photography in the Usakos old location

chapter 4|19 pages

Women Photographers in Angola and Mozambique (1909–1950)

A history of an absence

part II|66 pages

Photographic dialogues with the past

chapter 5|22 pages

‘Don’t Touch’

Inheriting the Deo Gratias Photo Studio in Ghana – an interview with Kate Tamakloe-Vanderpuije

part III|56 pages

Gender and sexuality in photographic practice

chapter 8|14 pages

‘We Own the Night’

Youth and self-fashioning in Fatoumata Diabaté’s Sutigi

chapter 9|27 pages

Photographs and Memory Making

Curating Kewpie: Daughter of District Six

chapter 10|13 pages

Beyond the Frame

Zanele Muholi’s queer visual activism

part IV|66 pages

Feminist and postcolonial practices

chapter 11|22 pages

Affective Archives

Re-animating family photographs in the works of Lebohang Kganye and Thenjiwe Niki Nkosi

chapter 12|22 pages

Visual Currencies

Performative photography in South African contemporary art

chapter 13|20 pages

Héla Ammar’s Tarz

An affective and imaginative memory upon dispossession