Photography in Portuguese Colonial Africa, 1860–1975

He was a Visiting Scholar at the Calouste Gulbenkian Museum in Lisbon (2020) and an Art Histories and Aesthetic Practices Fellow at the Forum Transregionale Studien in Berlin, affiliated with Freie Universität Berlin (2019). He is the co-editor, with Tom Snow, of the book Activism (2023)

Bibliographic Details
Other Authors: Vicente, Filipa Lowndes (Editor), Ramos, Afonso Dias (Editor)
Format: eBook
Language:English
Published: Cham Palgrave Macmillan 2023, 2023
Edition:1st ed. 2023
Series:Cambridge Imperial and Post-Colonial Studies
Subjects:
Online Access:
Collection: Springer eBooks 2005- - Collection details see MPG.ReNa
Table of Contents:
  • Chapter 16. ‘Our Nightly Bread’: Women and the City in Ricardo Rangel’s Photographs of Lourenço Marques, Mozambique (1950s–1960s)./
  • Chapter 1. Caught on Camera: An Introduction to Photography in Portuguese Colonial Africa
  • Part I Charting the Empire: Knowledge, Control, Power
  • Part I Charting the Empire: Knowledge, Control, Power
  • Chapter 2. Photographing Tropical Plants in the Late Nineteenth Century: Scientific Practices and Botanical Knowledge Production
  • Chapter 3. Stopping for the Camera: Photographs of the Portuguese Expedition to Báruè, Mozambique, 1902
  • Chapter 4. Ethnographic Album of Angola: Overlaps Between Photography, Knowledge and Empire (1930s–1940s)
  • Chapter 5. An Africanist Photo-ethno-graphy in the Portuguese New State (1928–1974)
  • Chapter 6. To See Is to Know? Anthropological Differentiations on Portuguese Colonial Photography Through the Work of Mendes Correia
  • Part II Showcasing the Empire: Propaganda, Media, Exhibitions
  • Chapter 7. Visions of Wildlife and Hunting in the “Sportsmen’s Paradise”: Exploring Photography from the Mozambique Company’s Archive
  • Chapter 8. IndustrialLandscapes in Colonial Mozambique: Images from an Economic Magazine
  • Chapter 9. To See, to Sell: The Role of the Photographic Image in Portuguese Colonial Exhibitions (1929–1940)
  • Chapter 10. Images of Angola and Mozambique in the Imperial Metropolis: Photographic Exhibitions Held at the Palácio Foz (1938–1960)
  • Chapter 11. Vision and violence. Black women’s bodies on display (1900–1975)
  • Part III Holding the Empire: Political Violence, Labour, Struggle
  • Chapter 12.Images That Kill: Counterinsurgency and Photography in Angola Circa 1961
  • Chapter 13. Colonial War/Liberation Struggle in Guinea Bissau: From Personal Photographs to Public Silences
  • Chapter 14. Curating the Past: Memory, History, and Private Photographs of the Portuguese Colonial Wars
  • Chapter 15. Photographic Colonial Agency: The Work of Agostiniano de Oliveira at the Diamang (1948–1966)