Home / Books / When Home Is a Photograph

When Home Is a Photograph

Blackness and Belonging in the World

Cover of When Home Is a Photograph features a silver iridescent couch on a hardwood floor surrounded by a gallery wall of framed artwork and photographs on a white wall. The art is arranged by color to create a rainbow.

The Visual Arts of Africa and Its Diasporas

More about this series

Read the Introduction

Book

Pages: 170

Illustrations: 50 illustrations

Published: April 2026

Author: Leigh Raiford

In When Home Is a Photograph, Leigh Raiford asks how Black people use photography to make home in the world. Raiford focuses on a selection of Black American activists and artists, including Marcus Garvey, James Van Der Zee, Eslanda Goode Robeson, and Kathleen Neal Cleaver to explore the complex relationship between racialized subjects and the medium of photography. As they traveled the world for study, for work, for pleasure, or for survival, these artists and activists took and collected photographs to express their political platforms and personal sense of self. Raiford considers the everyday image-making practices that these Black Americans employed to improve the condition of Black lives globally by imagining, identifying, inhabiting, leaving, defending, and destroying “home.” When Home Is a Photograph shows how these figures did not merely utilize photography to emplace themselves in the world—they demonstrated how the use of photography is itself a way to mediate one’s relationship to the world.

Praise

“It is impossible to read Leigh Raiford’s tour de force and ever think of world-making without the image ever again. When Home Is a Photograph is not just a masterpiece for the history of photography, black studies, and the humanities, it is a landmark necessary to understand the extraordinary act now seen as an everyday encounter—how photography allows us to craft a home in the world.” - Sarah Elizabeth Lewis, John L. Loeb Associate Professor of the Humanities and African and African American Studies, Harvard University

“A major contribution to visual studies focusing on concepts of reimagining home as it explores how Black people throughout the diaspora used photography to make ‘home’ despite displacement and migration. Raiford draws on the archives of activists, writers, artists and photographers to invite us to consider political and familial connections and the unseen in imaging home. It’s as burdened by conflicted histories, as it is rich with possibilities of love, and a captivating read.” - Deborah Willis, New York University

Buy

Availability: In stock

Price: $25.95

Buy the e-book:

Open Access

Read the OA edition here.

Request a desk or exam copy

Information

Author/Editor Bios

Back to Top
Leigh Raiford is Professor of African American and African Diaspora studies at the University of California, Berkeley. Her most recent book is Collaboration: A Potential History of Photography.

Table Of Contents

Back to Top
When I Think of Home . . . (acknowledgments)  ix
Introduction. When Home Is a Photograph  1
1. The Cynosure of the Eyes of Harlem: Marcus Garvey and James Van Der Zee in Stereograph  17
2. To Feel Perfectly at Home: Eslanda Robeson’s Ethnographic Lens  45
3. Making Home in Exile: Kathleen Cleaver’s Black Panther Family Album  79
4. Shelter in Place: Dawoud Bey, Sadie Barnette, and the Photography of Uncertainty  109
Notes  127
Bibliography  141
Index  153

Rights

Back to Top

Sales/Territorial Rights: World

Rights and licensing

Additional Information

Back to Top
Related Links Paper ISBN: 978-1-4780-3331-8 / Hardcover ISBN: 978-1-4780-2986-1 / eISBN: 978-1-4780-6206-6 / DOI: https://doi.org/10.1215/9781478062066

Funding Information

Back to Top
This book is freely available in an open access edition thanks to the generous support of the University of California Libraries.