Snapshots of freedom : street photography in Cape Town from the 1930s to the 1980s

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Authors

O’Connell, Siona

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University of Pretoria, Department of Visual Arts

Abstract

In this article, I look at the “ordinary” (or “everyday”) archive of the racially oppressed, viewing it as an entry point into apartheid afterlives, while arguing for a rethinking of humanness and freedom after racial oppression. I consider the photographs produced by “Movie Snaps” – a street photographic studio of Cape Town, South Africa, that operated between the 1930s and the 1980s – and suggest that looking to previously marginalised narratives can offer insight into larger questions of self-representation, belonging and freedom. The contents of this article are based on a larger research project on forced removals in Cape Town, out of which several exhibitions and two documentary films have been produced to date.

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Keywords

Apartheid, Forced removals, Photography, Archive, Freedom, Representation, Street photography

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Citation

O'Connell, S. 2017, 'Snapshots of freedom : street photography in Cape Town from the 1930s to the 1980s', Image and Text, no. 29, pp. 219-234.