A journey through the United Fruit Company's photo archive and its
documentation of corporate expansion into the Caribbean.
The establishment of the United Fruit Company as a global political
agent with its banana plantations was met with considerable resistance.
Now the company's photographic records are the focal point of Archive
Matter as it examines photography's historical and political impact
through the argument that this overlooked, but important, archive made
capitalist expansion into the Caribbean possible.
Author Liliana Gómez examines the images from within their "optical
unconscious" and via the archive's silences and omissions. The
implication of these silences, Gómez argues, is the attempt to conceal
the violence embedded within the realities of the plantations' daily
operations and corporate efforts to "modernize" the Caribbean.