The Surface of Things: A History of Photography from the Swahili Coast

The first major history of photography from coastal East Africa

The ports of the Swahili coast—Zanzibar and Mombasa among them—have long been dynamic centers of trade where diverse peoples, ideas, and materials converge. With the arrival of photography in the mid-nineteenth century, these predominantly Muslim coastal communities cultivated and transformed the medium. The Surface of Things examines the complex maritime dynamics that shaped the photography of coastal Africa, exploring the pleasure and power of beautiful things and the ways people and their pictures transcended the boundaries of the colonial world.

Immersing readers in the globally interconnected networks of eastern Africa’s port cities, Prita Meier demonstrates how photographs are not static images but mobile objects with remarkable shape-shifting qualities. Beginning with the earliest photographs introduced through seaborne commerce, the medium’s integration into the cultural landscape was swift. Photographs functioned as objects of decoration, good taste, and cosmopolitanism, but were also used by local elites and foreigners to coerce and objectify enslaved people. Meier uncovers the oppressive agenda behind postcards and other popular images while describing African strategies of subversion and rebellion, revealing the performative authority that individuals exerted over their photographic likenesses.

Featuring more than two hundred images published here for the first time, The Surface of Things repositions the continent’s islands and archipelagos at the center of global photographic histories and shows how the people of the African Indian Ocean world experienced photography as a force of both oppression and freedom.

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The Surface of Things: A History of Photography from the Swahili Coast

The first major history of photography from coastal East Africa

The ports of the Swahili coast—Zanzibar and Mombasa among them—have long been dynamic centers of trade where diverse peoples, ideas, and materials converge. With the arrival of photography in the mid-nineteenth century, these predominantly Muslim coastal communities cultivated and transformed the medium. The Surface of Things examines the complex maritime dynamics that shaped the photography of coastal Africa, exploring the pleasure and power of beautiful things and the ways people and their pictures transcended the boundaries of the colonial world.

Immersing readers in the globally interconnected networks of eastern Africa’s port cities, Prita Meier demonstrates how photographs are not static images but mobile objects with remarkable shape-shifting qualities. Beginning with the earliest photographs introduced through seaborne commerce, the medium’s integration into the cultural landscape was swift. Photographs functioned as objects of decoration, good taste, and cosmopolitanism, but were also used by local elites and foreigners to coerce and objectify enslaved people. Meier uncovers the oppressive agenda behind postcards and other popular images while describing African strategies of subversion and rebellion, revealing the performative authority that individuals exerted over their photographic likenesses.

Featuring more than two hundred images published here for the first time, The Surface of Things repositions the continent’s islands and archipelagos at the center of global photographic histories and shows how the people of the African Indian Ocean world experienced photography as a force of both oppression and freedom.

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The Surface of Things: A History of Photography from the Swahili Coast

The Surface of Things: A History of Photography from the Swahili Coast

by Prita Meier
The Surface of Things: A History of Photography from the Swahili Coast

The Surface of Things: A History of Photography from the Swahili Coast

by Prita Meier

eBook

$60.00 

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Overview

The first major history of photography from coastal East Africa

The ports of the Swahili coast—Zanzibar and Mombasa among them—have long been dynamic centers of trade where diverse peoples, ideas, and materials converge. With the arrival of photography in the mid-nineteenth century, these predominantly Muslim coastal communities cultivated and transformed the medium. The Surface of Things examines the complex maritime dynamics that shaped the photography of coastal Africa, exploring the pleasure and power of beautiful things and the ways people and their pictures transcended the boundaries of the colonial world.

Immersing readers in the globally interconnected networks of eastern Africa’s port cities, Prita Meier demonstrates how photographs are not static images but mobile objects with remarkable shape-shifting qualities. Beginning with the earliest photographs introduced through seaborne commerce, the medium’s integration into the cultural landscape was swift. Photographs functioned as objects of decoration, good taste, and cosmopolitanism, but were also used by local elites and foreigners to coerce and objectify enslaved people. Meier uncovers the oppressive agenda behind postcards and other popular images while describing African strategies of subversion and rebellion, revealing the performative authority that individuals exerted over their photographic likenesses.

Featuring more than two hundred images published here for the first time, The Surface of Things repositions the continent’s islands and archipelagos at the center of global photographic histories and shows how the people of the African Indian Ocean world experienced photography as a force of both oppression and freedom.


Product Details

ISBN-13: 9780691260969
Publisher: Princeton University Press
Publication date: 10/15/2024
Sold by: Barnes & Noble
Format: eBook
Pages: 280
File size: 221 MB
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About the Author

Prita Meier is associate professor of African art history at New York University. She is the author of Swahili Port Cities: The Architecture of Elsewhere and the coeditor of World on the Horizon: Swahili Arts across the Indian Ocean.

What People are Saying About This

From the Publisher

“Prita Meier’s compelling book overturns the common sense of African photography with its emphasis on the itinerant quality of images and how they index beauty and brutality, often at the same time. East Africa’s Swahili coast offers Meier a productive space for underscoring complex photographic significations beyond colonial capture and affirmative representation. With her accent on the oceanic and transitory character of photographs, combined with a sophisticated historical heft and impressive analytical toolkit, Meier generates a work filled with surprising insights and transformative methodological significance. The Surface of Things will impress readers with its fresh articulation of the history of photography underscoring photographs’ object relations and desire logics.”—Cajetan Iheka, author of African Ecomedia: Network Forms, Planetary Politics

“This outstanding book provides an extraordinarily rich introduction, through photography, to the historical lifeworlds and role of enslavement on the Swahili coast. Prita Meier is an illuminating, generous guide to this world, making legible a magnificent and extensive range of visual materials.”—Christopher Pinney, author of Camera Indica: The Social Life of Indian Photographs

The Surface of Things offers exciting new arguments and interpretations of photographs to say something significant about image making and meaning distinct to Swahili societies. The power in Prita Meier’s work is in her ability to negotiate different worldviews simultaneously.”—Pamila Gupta, author of Portuguese Decolonization in the Indian Ocean World: History and Ethnography

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