Beneath the City’s Grid: Vernacular and (Post)colonial Planning Interactions in Dakar, Senegal

Liora Bigon, Thomas Hart

Research output: Chapter in Book/Report/Conference proceedingChapterpeer-review

1 Scopus citations

Abstract

This chapter traces the history of the indigenous grid-pattern settlement in Senegal and the Western Sudan, drawing significant contrasts with the uses of the grid plan as a tool of European colonial rule in Africa. The authors maintain that while the search for a unitary “origin” of the grid is historically refutable, questions about the grid’s origins are still sensitive in African Studies. By providing qualitative insights into the grid-pènç relations, particularly in Dakar from its colonial creation to the present time, this chapter demonstrates that indigenous and occidental planning cultures became intimately entangled. Moreover, indigenous spatial practices have still survived in the most Westernized parts of Dakar and the region. The authors’ focus on the Lebou enclaves beneath the grids of the oldest colonial quarters of Dakar also balances current research tendencies, which are preoccupied with Lebou Islamic practices in Dakar’s suburbs.

Original languageEnglish
Title of host publicationGridded Worlds
Subtitle of host publicationAn Urban Anthology
Pages177-206
Number of pages30
ISBN (Electronic)9783319764900
DOIs
StatePublished - 1 Jan 2018
Externally publishedYes

Keywords

  • Bubonic plague
  • Dakar
  • French colonial planning
  • Grid
  • Lebou settlement-design
  • Pènç
  • Senegal
  • Spatial production
  • Touba

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