The architecture of colonial imprisonment: The afterlives of colonial incarceration in Africa
Thu, 29 Feb
|London
Time & Location
29 Feb 2024, 17:00
London, SOAS, University of London Thornhaugh Street, Russell Sq, London WC1B 5DQ, UK
About the event
The history of incarceration in Africa stretches from the slave trade to the current day. Prisons were often some of the first buildings built by colonial powers in Africa. Numerous colonial incarceration practices across time and space resulted in the erection of varied architectures of incarceration slave forts to detention camps. This talk explores how some of these sites are currently used and remembered in Ghana, Kenya and South Africa. It explores how the architecture of these sites, their positioning within a broader landscape, and their contemporary usage, shapes the ways in which they are understood by the communities that surround them, and engage with or avoid them.
Bio
Dr. Laura Routley is a Reader in African Politics at Newcastle university. She is also the Principle Investigator on the Leverhulme funded research project – Afterlives of colonial incarceration: African, Prisons, Politics and Architecture, which explores the memory politics of former sites of colonial imprisonment across Ghana, Kenya, Nigeria, and South Africa.