Ernest Cole: House of Bondage
English
Cole, a Black South African man, photographed the underbelly of apartheid in the 1950s and 60s, often at great personal risk. He methodically captured the myriad forms of violence embedded in everyday life for the Black majority under the apartheid systempicturing its miners, its police, its hospitals, its schools. In 1966, Cole fled South Africa and smuggled out his negatives; House of Bondage was published the following year with his writings and first-person account. This edition retains the powerful story of the original while adding new perspectives on Coles life and the legacy of House of Bondage. It also features an added chaptercompiled and titled Black Ingenuity by Coleof never-before-seen photographs of Black creative expression and cultural activity taking place under apartheid. Made available again nearly fifty-five years later, House of Bondage remains a visually powerful and politically incisive document of the apartheid era. See more