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Rediscovering an American community of color: the photographs of William Bullard, 1897-1917
Alternate title
Photographs of William Bullard, 1897-1917
By
Abstract
This book presents a photographic narrative of African American and Native American migration and resettlement in the aftermath of emancipation and reconstruction. Taken between 1897 and 1917 by itinerant photographer William Bullard of Worcester, Massachusetts, these photographs address larger themes involving race in American history, many of which remain relevant today: the story of people of color claiming their rightful place in society and creating a community in new surroundings. William Bullard's heretofore unpublished collection of more than 230 glass negatives presenting the African American and Nipmuc communities of Worcester, Massachusetts, at the turn of the century provides an exceptional opportunity to significantly deepen our understanding of the use of photography at a political and personal level. Unlike most extant photographic collections of black Americans taken in this period, the subjects in Bullard's photographs are identified in his logbook, allowing this book to tell specific stories about individuals and re-create a more accurate historical context. -- Exhibition: Worcester Art Museum, United States (14.10.2017 - 25.02.2018).
Contributors
Publisher
Publication
Worcester, Massachusetts: Worcester Art Museum, 2017
Year
Is about
Person
Subject
Period
1897-1917
Type
Language
Classification
ISBN
- 9780998681733
- 0998681733
Annotations / title notes
Notes
Published by the Worcester Art Museum on the occasion of the exhibition, Rediscovering an American Community of Color: The Photographs of William Bullard, 1897-1917, a collaboration with Clark University, on view October 14, 2017-February 25, 2018.
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