Full Description
In Unfixed Jennifer Bajorek traces the relationship between photography and decolonial political imagination in Francophone west Africa in the years immediately leading up to and following independence from French colonial rule in 1960. Focusing on images created by photographers based in Senegal and Benin, Bajorek draws on formal analyses of images and ethnographic fieldwork with photographers to show how photography not only reflected but also actively contributed to social and political change. The proliferation of photographic imagery-through studio portraiture, bureaucratic ID cards, political reportage and photojournalism, magazines, and more-provided the means for west Africans to express their experiences, shape public and political discourse, and reimagine their world. In delineating how west Africans' embrace of photography was associated with and helped spur the democratization of political participation and the development of labor and liberation movements, Bajorek tells a new history of photography in west Africa-one that theorizes photography's capacity for doing decolonial work.
Contents
List of Illustrations vii
A Note on Geography, Spelling, and Language xiii
Preface xvii
Acknowledgments xix
Introduction. At Least Two Histories of Liberation 1
Part I. What Makes a Popular Photography?
1. Ça bousculait! (It Was Happening!) 41
2. Wild Circulation: Photography as Urban Media 83
3. Decolonizing Print Culture: The Example of Bingo 117
Part II. Republic of Images
4. Africanizing Political Photography 163
5. The Pleasures of State-Sponsored Photography 203
6. African Futures, Lost and Found 240
Notes 265
Bibliography 307
Index 319



