The House and Embodied Memory: Sharing and Negotiating Social Knowledge Through Space and Bodily Practice
Abstract:
This article takes the reader on a journey around the spaces of west African houses, and shows how the social world is replicated in the built environment. Based on the case study, this article argues that architecture serves as a model of the outside world to its inhabitants. Knowledge about the social order is embodied by moving through the architectural space. In this particular case, the society's kinship system and kin relations are encoded in the compounds' architectural spaces. This article traces how this order is created, read, and reproduced by its inhabitants, and argues that the house serves as a model of the social (kinship) order. I article conclude by showing that the emic architectural model of the local kinship systems allows for a higher complexity than verbal descriptions can. This article contributes to an anthropology of the house and discusses questions of collective knowledge and memory. It offers considerations of the nature of emic models and cognitive maps, and explores how these maps are shared and reproduced.Keywords: AFRICAN ARCHITECTURE; ANTHROPOLOGY OF SPACE; COLLECTIVE MEMORY; EMIC MODELS; KINSHIP
DOI: 10.3167/jys.2008.090206
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