Abstract:
This article addresses the modes of representation and circulation of photographs of Black people in the early years of European colonialist expansion, between the late nineteenth and the early twentieth centuries. Drawing oncartes de visiteand especially on postcards with images of Africans, Afro-Caribbeans and Afro-Brazilians, the text proposes a transnational approach to the ways in which the visual canons and the productions of meaning stemming from the visual/racial culture of European colonialism have been reproduced in commercial photographs of the period.
Keywords:
Black Atlantic; Photography; Colonialism