Counterstructures and Mission Preservation
Malaquais argues the this institution of the church by British and French colonizers encouraged the use of architecture and topography by the Bamileke people to highlight hierarchy and power. In “Building the Name of God: Architecture, Resistance and the Christian Faith of Western Cameroon” notes the idea of “counterstructures”— opponents to the existing dominance of a certain culture. This counter need not be violent or even overt, but can be contained within a symbol— such as art or architecture. The counterstructures were created as Christianity took a foothold within the Bamileke plateau of western Cameroon, where both rich and poor utilized subtle approaches of indiscipline and architecture to resist hierarchy. The 1900s is when a majority of religious and systemic conflict occurred. The chiefs, mfo or fo where said to be chosen ones of the almighty Si, yet Christianoty did not have a place for this. “Divergent views of the divine realm and its links to rulership” pl...