The anatomy of architecture : ontology and metaphor in Batammaliba architectural expression / Suzanne Preston Blier.

By: Blier, Suzanne Preston [author.]Material type: TextTextLanguage: English Publisher: Chicago, London : University of Chicago Press, 1994Copyright date: ©1987Description: xviii, 314 pages : illustrations, plans ; 23 cmContent type: text Media type: unmediated Carrier type: volumeISBN: 0226058610 (paperback)Subject(s): Architecture, Somba (African people) | Somba (African people) -- Social life and customsLOC classification: DT541.45.S65 B55 1994Subject: Blier illuminates the extraordinary architecture of the Batammaliba people of Western Africa, revealing these buildings as texts through which we can read the beliefs, psychology, traditions, and social concerns of their inhabitants. In doing so, she explores the role of vernacular architecture as an expression of culture. “A splendid analysis of the centrality of architecture in the daily lives of the Batammaliba and its integral role in articulating social values....The story is beautifully told in the best of anthropological traditions.”—Judith R. Blau, Contemporary Society ”A remarkable study....Blier’s volume carries the study of African architecture to a qualitatively new level of scholarship. It introduces a new dimension whereby the architectural medium can be used to illuminate much of the entire belief system of any culture.”—Labelle Prussin, African Arts ”In this excellent book Blier provides a richly detailed and searching account of what architecture means to the Batammaliba of northern Togo and Benin....The finest account I have yet read of the relations between systems of beliefs, ritual practices, and African aesthetics and plastic arts....The ethnography and basic insight should be the envy of any social anthropologist.”—T.O. Beidelman, Man -backover- https://press.uchicago.edu/ucp/books/book/chicago/A/bo3622893.html
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Includes bibliographical references (pages 297-303) and index (pages 305-314).

Blier illuminates the extraordinary architecture of the Batammaliba people of Western Africa, revealing these buildings as texts through which we can read the beliefs, psychology, traditions, and social concerns of their inhabitants. In doing so, she explores the role of vernacular architecture as an expression of culture.

“A splendid analysis of the centrality of architecture in the daily lives of the Batammaliba and its integral role in articulating social values....The story is beautifully told in the best of anthropological traditions.”—Judith R. Blau, Contemporary Society

”A remarkable study....Blier’s volume carries the study of African architecture to a qualitatively new level of scholarship. It introduces a new dimension whereby the architectural medium can be used to illuminate much of the entire belief system of any culture.”—Labelle Prussin, African Arts

”In this excellent book Blier provides a richly detailed and searching account of what architecture means to the Batammaliba of northern Togo and Benin....The finest account I have yet read of the relations between systems of beliefs, ritual practices, and African aesthetics and plastic arts....The ethnography and basic insight should be the envy of any social anthropologist.”—T.O. Beidelman, Man -backover-

https://press.uchicago.edu/ucp/books/book/chicago/A/bo3622893.html