
Contents
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Introduction Introduction
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The official encounter The official encounter
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Colonial beginnings Colonial beginnings
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The project of Senegal: metropolitan training The project of Senegal: metropolitan training
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Planning imprints Planning imprints
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Military structures Military structures
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A master plan for Dakar A master plan for Dakar
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Notes Notes
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Two Planting the flag and military planning in imperial Dakar: asymmetries, uncertainties, illusions
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Published:April 2016
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Abstract
This chapter seeks to illuminate the embryonic local and the regional contexts in the creation of Dakar in the second half of the nineteenth century. This is against the metropolitan, colonial and indigenous backgrounds in matters of planning and architectural cultures. It goes beyond the discourse on colonial spatiality as an instrument for virtually complete domination, surveillance and control, and elaborates on the inherent ironies in the colonial planning projects. This is in terms of the grandiose urban visions as against the contemporary urban ‘deathly sleep’; the torpedoing of colonial urban endeavours by infectious diseases; and the awkwardly-realised urban installations in neighbouring communes such as Saint-Louis and Bamako. Vernacular traditions of settlement organisation and built form are also provided side by side with colonial ones and occasionally compared.
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