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An anti-apartheid protest by students at the entrance to the Hamilton Hall building of Columbia University, New York City, 4th April 1984. - Barbara Alper/Getty Images
Another one of my pictures: View more of my images: I, Matthew T Rader, have published this media under the terms of the license CC BY-SA which allows you to: Freely use and distribute it for non-commercial or for commercial purposes; Create derivative works of it; Under this condition: Credit me as the original author and use the same license.
Many of the images were of rallies or protests, instances of authority brutality, and impoverished areas. Kylie Thomas suggests that the history of social documentary photography in the Afrapix period is probably more complex and heterogenous than often suggested, especially when analysing the work of women photographers such as Gille De Vlieg ...
This category is for articles about well-known photographs of protests, protesters, or people responding to protests. Pages in category "Photographs of protests" The following 19 pages are in this category, out of 19 total.
African Activist Archive – more than 7,000 documents, posters, T-shirts, buttons, photos, videos, and memories of activism in the U.S. to support the struggles of African peoples against apartheid, colonialism, and social injustice, the 1950s–1990s. Also includes a directory of African activist organizations across the U.S.
Warren K. Leffler's photograph of the March on Washington for Jobs and Freedom at the National Mall. Beginning with the murder of Emmett Till in 1955, photography and photographers played an important role in advancing the civil rights movement by documenting the public and private acts of racial discrimination against African Americans and the nonviolent response of the movement.
Pro-Palestinian protesters gather in front of the Travis County Jail to support those arrested during protests at the University of Texas earlier in the day, April 24, 2024 in Austin, Texas.
Subsequent civil disobedience protests targeted curfews, pass laws, and "petty apartheid" segregation in public facilities. Some anti-apartheid demonstrations resulted in widespread rioting in Port Elizabeth and East London in 1952, but organised destruction of property was not deliberately employed until 1959. [8]