
New Books Network Itohan I. Osayimwese, "Africa's Buildings: Architecture and the Displacement of Cultural Heritage" (Princeton UP, 2025)
Feb 3, 2026
Itohan I. Osayimwese, professor of architectural and urban history who studies Sub-Saharan Africa, discusses how colonial collectors dismembered and dispersed African building parts to Western museums. She traces violent removals from Dendera to Great Zimbabwe and Benin. She examines how labeling architectural fragments as ornament erased their function and argues for renaming, restitution, and new museum roles.
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Fragments Dominate Visual Records
- Many African architectural images in Western databases are only fragments rather than whole buildings.
- Itohan I. Osayimwese discovered this gap while teaching and traced it to widespread removal of building parts.
Dismemberment Reveals Colonial Violence
- 'Dismemberment' captures the violent removal and fragmentation of buildings and their parts.
- The term makes visible the physical and ethical violence behind many museum collections.
MCN's Pan‑African Museum Origin
- The Musée des Civilisations Noires (MCN) in Dakar opened in 2018 to counter colonial museum models.
- It aims to display African cultures as living, pan-African civilizations and to engage contemporary artisans.

