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Architectures of Slavery - (Race, Place, and Justice) by Nathaniel Robert Walker & Rachel Ama Asaa Engmann
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Highlights
- The material legacies of slavery across the Atlantic world Atlantic slavery has bequeathed architectural legacies from the plantation ruins that fill the valleys of Cuba to the servant's quarters of middle-class apartment housing in Brazil; from picturesque New England waterfronts to the modernist ranch-house suburbs of Savannah; and from the castle-studded coastline of Ghana to steel-framed commercial high-rises in South Carolina.
- About the Author: Nathaniel Robert Walker is Associate Professor of Architectural History at the Catholic University of America and coeditor of Suffragette City: Women, Politics, and the Built Environment.
- 368 Pages
- Architecture, History
- Series Name: Race, Place, and Justice
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About the Book
"This book examines the architectural legacies of Atlantic slavery"--
Book Synopsis
The material legacies of slavery across the Atlantic world
Atlantic slavery has bequeathed architectural legacies from the plantation ruins that fill the valleys of Cuba to the servant's quarters of middle-class apartment housing in Brazil; from picturesque New England waterfronts to the modernist ranch-house suburbs of Savannah; and from the castle-studded coastline of Ghana to steel-framed commercial high-rises in South Carolina. The stories of these places are woven together by historical threads stretched across the past five hundred years, connecting them first through empire and forced migration, then by modern economic development and heritage tourism. Architectures of Slavery brings new clarity and critical insight to these visible injustices that still haunt so many societies in the Atlantic world, empowering its people to build more democratic and just places in the future.
About the Author
Nathaniel Robert Walker is Associate Professor of Architectural History at the Catholic University of America and coeditor of Suffragette City: Women, Politics, and the Built Environment. Rachel Ama Asaa Engmann is Director of the Christiansborg Archaeological Heritage Project in Ghana and editor of Timbuktu Unbound: Islamic Texts, Textual Traditions, and Heritage in West Africa.