| Since the middle of the twentieth century, photographs have become an integral part of the material culture and visual economy of black South Africa. In this project we will be investigating how black South Africans have appropriated the technology of photography, and made decisions as to the images they wished to create and to preserve. As a result we are arguing against a view which sees photography as merely a tool of oppression; rather, in this project, the emphasis is on the way in which photography has become part of, and evidence for, the developing popular culture of apartheid and post-apartheid South Africa, in which both the specific modernities and the "traditions", including the ethnicities of the country are expressed. Simultaneously we will investigate how vernacular photography is moving from being purely private possessions to becoming part of the common heritage and the 'Archive' of post-apartheid South Africa. |