Hostname: page-component-7bb8b95d7b-s9k8s Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-09-17T15:31:31.833Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

The Thomas Hardie Dalrymple Grassfields Photographs Collection 1937-1942 (Royal Commonwealth Society Collections, University of Cambridge Library)

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  25 April 2022

Mathias Alubafi Fubah*
Affiliation:
Forum Transregionale Studien, Berlin
Get access

Extract

Collections of photographs by colonial officers, missionaries and medical personnel taken during the colonial era, can be found in many public and private archives and museums, in Africa, Europe and America. Although the existence of most of these collections have been made known to the public through exhibitions, catalogues and publications (Geary 1991, 2000; Webb 1987, 1988), some have received scant or no attention. This, however, is in spite of the role of colonial photographs as “testimony about early explorations and distant peoples and places” (Geary 1988). Colonial photography, Geary notes, is part of the “discourse about foreign worlds and foreign peoples—a discourse revealing as much about ‘us’ as it reveals about ‘them'” (Geary 1988: 11).

Type
Articles
Copyright
Copyright © African Research & Documentation 2013

Access options

Get access to the full version of this content by using one of the access options below. (Log in options will check for institutional or personal access. Content may require purchase if you do not have access.)

References

Works Cited

Geary, C. 2000. ‘Photographing in the Cameroon Grassfields 1970-1984African Arts, 33 (4): 70-77+96.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Geary, C. 1991. ‘Missionary Photography: Private and Public Readings.’ African Arts,24 (4): 48-59+98-100.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Geary, C. 1989. ‘Images from Bamum: German Colonial Photography at the Court of King Njoya, Cameroon, West Africa,’ 1902-1915. Review by Ross, D., African Arts, 22 (4): 10+12+14+16.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Geary, C. 1988. Images from Bamum: German Colonial Photography at the Court of King Njoya, Cameroon, West Africa, 1090-1915. Smithsonian Books.Google Scholar
Scroggins, B. 2010. ‘Photography and Colonialism: Photographs as Support for Racialized Science.’ Unpublished Honours Thesis Paper. College of Art and History.Google Scholar
Webb, V. 1988. ‘Images of Bamum: German Colonial Photography at the Court of King Njoya, Cameroon, West Africa,’ 1902-1915. African Arts, 22 (1): 88-89.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Webb, V. 1987. ‘The Photographs of Paul Gebauer.’ African Arts, 20 (2): 46-51+82.CrossRefGoogle Scholar