試す 金 - 無料
Lost Photographs of Black America
The Atlantic
|March 2024
Ernest Cole was born in 1940 to a Black family in the Eersterust township, near Pretoria, South Africa.

As a child, he witnessed the formalization of the apartheid regime. When he was a teenager, he began working for Drum, a South African magazine geared toward Black readers. He later changed the spelling of his surname from Kole to Cole, which along with straightening his hair-helped reclassify him as "Coloured," a formal designation that gave him more freedom of movement in the country's calcifying racial hierarchy. He became one of South Africa's first Black freelance photographers, earning the ire of apartheid enforcers by capturing the human costs of the regime.
But Cole wanted to have a wider reach, and in 1966, he arrived in the United States, having smuggled enough photos out of South Africa to publish a book. House of Bondage introduced many people around the world to the horrors of apartheid. Those images of malnutrition and ritual humiliation were also the last he'd take of his country. He was soon banned from South Africa, and after sojourns in Sweden, he faded into obscurity on the streets of New York City. Cole, who died in exile in 1990, never published another book.
このストーリーは、The Atlantic の March 2024 版からのものです。
Magzter GOLD を購読すると、厳選された何千ものプレミアム記事や、9,500 以上の雑誌や新聞にアクセスできます。
すでに購読者ですか? サインイン
The Atlantic からのその他のストーリー

The Atlantic
CANADA IS KILLING ITSELF
THE COUNTRY GAVE ITS CITIZENS THE RIGHT TO DIE...DOCTORS ARE STRUGGLING TO KEEP UP WITH DEMAND.
28 mins
September 2025

The Atlantic
WHY MARRIAGE SURVIVES
The institution has adapted, and is showing new signs of resilience.
9 mins
September 2025

The Atlantic
The Forgotten Still-Life Prodigy
The 17th-century painter Rachel Ruysch was once more famous than Vermeer.
9 mins
September 2025

The Atlantic
THIS IS WHAT THE END OF THE LIBERAL WORLD ORDER LOOKS LIKE
In a post-American world, greed and nihilism are destroying Sudan.
39 mins
September 2025

The Atlantic
The Judgments of Muriel Spark
The novelist Muriel Spark died almost 20 years ago, but she still regularly appears on lists of top comic novelists to read on this subject or that. Crave more White Lotus-level skewering of the ridiculous rich? Try Memento Mori, The New York Times suggests. An acerbic take on boring dinner parties? Symposium. Interested in “the fun and funny aspects of being a teacher”? Read The Prime of Miss Jean Brodie— also good for learning how to be a highly inappropriate teacher, if you want to know that too.
12 mins
September 2025

The Atlantic
Playing Mailman
A new memoir considers what public service is, and what it isn't.
8 mins
September 2025

The Atlantic
Chasing le Carré in Corfu
If you're trying to find someone who doesn't want to be found, you don't go to the obvious places.
20 mins
September 2025

The Atlantic
THE MAN WHO ATE NASA
The agency once projected America's loftiest ideals. Then it ceded its ambitions to Elon Musk.
27 mins
September 2025

The Atlantic
CAPTAIN RON'S GUIDE TO FEARLESS FLYING
The pilot who calms the nerves of anxious fliers
7 mins
September 2025

The Atlantic
GOING BACK
What home meant before, and after, Hurricane Katrina
10 mins
September 2025
Listen
Translate
Change font size