I really like this series of photographs by University of Virginia African history and history of photography professor (and photographer), John Edwin Mason, on the Cape Town New Year’s Carnival, a series of marches, competitions and celebrations that incorporates Christmas Choirs, “Malay” Choirs and klopse (known to some participants as “Coons” or minstrels).
I grew up with the Klopse (both my father and younger brother have participated at some time or other), so these photographs remind me of my childhood in Cape Town.
The carnival itself has a complex history: it incorporates blackface, and was briefly co-opted by the Apartheid government, but has also served as a way for working class, mainly coloured people, to take over the streets of central Cape Town for two days of the year–New Year’s Eve and “Tweede Nuwejaar” (Second New Year’s)–the city remains largely segregated with its poorer black and coloured populations pushed to its margins). The Carnival also serves as an opportunity for participants to comment on politics of the day (for example, see the Barack Obama reference below) and assert their identities (which includes the only history of slavery by white colonists in South Africa’s history).
On his site, John (who has also written a great essay on the making of the jazz album, “Manenberg” by Abdullah Ibrahim, provides a FAQ on the Carnival, including why some participants turn up in black face.
Here are more photos from the series:











Great pics. I have scattered childhood memories from visits to family in Salt River. (In the 70s the klopse hadn’t penetrated rural areas yet). But so, what happened to the Acha Americans?
Thanks for the props. Glad that you like the project, especially since you come from a Carnival family.
The photos are the basis of “One Love, Ghoema Beat: Inside the Cape Town Carnival,” a book of my words and photos that will be available from Random House Struik, in South Africa, and the University of Virginia Press, in the US, in May 2010.
@BSE
Thanks very much.
The Achas are alive and well. They’re in a couple of the photos in the gallery at my website.