2010
DOI: 10.1177/1469605310378959
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Power by design

Abstract: This article examines the role of royal architectural design in strategies to promote political order in the Kingdom of Dahomey, a major West African state which emerged in the era of the transAtlantic slave trade. Historical and ethnographic sources are marshaled to identify an underlying normative architectural tradition in Dahomean palace construction, a tradition defined by distinct zones devoted to public ritual and semi-public political negotiations. Analysis of the ground plans of six royal palace compl… Show more

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Cited by 31 publications
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“…Stimulating in its range of approaches to domestic space, this book could be a source of ideas and insight to those working on houses and households in any region. Cameron Monroe's (2010) study of the architecture of successive royal palaces in west African Dahomey traces a sequence of increasing complexity, bureaucracy, and restriction of movement, suggestive of royal attempts to reinforce political order in unstable times.…”
Section: States In Action: Origins Pathways Interactionsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Stimulating in its range of approaches to domestic space, this book could be a source of ideas and insight to those working on houses and households in any region. Cameron Monroe's (2010) study of the architecture of successive royal palaces in west African Dahomey traces a sequence of increasing complexity, bureaucracy, and restriction of movement, suggestive of royal attempts to reinforce political order in unstable times.…”
Section: States In Action: Origins Pathways Interactionsmentioning
confidence: 99%