Carved Swahili Doors: Gateways of Status, Trade, and Transaction in East Africa
My dissertation examines the corpus of ornamentally carved wooden doors of the Swahili coast, those produced or sited within the narrow strip of Indian Ocean littoral that stretches from Mogadishu to Mozambique. I focus on late-nineteenth-century Zanzibar when that emporium flourished as a center of global trade and diverse cultural confluence, as did the fluorescence of the art form. The extant examples in Zanzibar are understood for their role as expressions of power, prestige, and wealth. In addition to elaborating upon those historical aspects, I argue for the doors’ significant protective functions. Rather than study the corpus under long-held ethnicity-based style categories, I contend it is most productive to examine the doors for their expression of a multivocal visual vocabulary that reflects the Zanzibar ethos and local image-making practices. This dissertation is in many ways an argument for a new methodological approach in the study of Swahili arts and culture.
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http://exhibitions.psu.edu/s/african-brilliance/page/splash
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