`"TAUZA - BOB GOSANI'`S PEOPLE"

`"TAUZA - BOB GOSANI'`S PEOPLE"

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Product details

Condition
Secondhand
Location
South Africa
Bob Shop ID
650626432

 "TAUZA  BOB GOSANI'S PEOPLE", HARDCOVER, FIRST EDITION 2005, PREVIOUS OWNERS DETAILS ON FEP, 116 PAGES, IN EXCELLENT CONDITION.

The late Bob Gosani started off at  magazine as a messenger but soon moved to the photographic department where he became 's darkroom assistant. He later became one of Drum's best photographers. Some of his pictures have become iconic images of the 1950s in South Africa e.g. the picture of Women during the  in 1952, sparring with his boxing club's star boxer of the time, Jerry Moloi and Nelson Mandela outside court in 1958. He was one of the original Drum photographers of the 1950s, who worked with all the big names of that era: Alf Kumalo, Bessie Head, Can Themba, Peter Magubane, Jurgen Schadeberg and many others. He died in 1972 and his photographs might have died with him, had they not been "discovered" by Jacqui Masiza, archivist/curator at Bailey's African History Archive, in April 1999. Describing them as "out of this world, a revelation", she felt that she felt she had a mission to get them published. Basil 'Doc' Bikitsha, a former Drum writer, in his foreword says: "For the 20 years that Bob actively worked for the media, his pictures documented the social, political and economic aspects of our lives. And what shines through in his work is his love of people." Enoch Duma, former Drum journalist: "The pictures that really got people talking about Bob were the series he took of the humiliating and degrading 'Tauza dance' that prisoners were forced to perform in the courtyard of the notorious Johannesburg prison, The Fort, in Hillbrow. The 'dance' was a humiliating way of ensuring that the prisoners were not smuggling any weapons or contraband into their cells after a day's hard labour." Gosani managed to photograph the Tauza secretly from the top floor of a nurses' home opposite the prison. When the pictures were published in Drum, there was a public outcry and the apartheid government was forced to sit up and take notice. He lived by the maxim "live fast, die young and have a great-looking corpse" and died at the age of 37. We hope that through this title his legacy will live on.

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