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Listening to Ancestors: Southern African Sonic and Spiritual Approaches to Relational Architecture (104727)

Session Information: Architecture in Urban Studies
Session Chair: Jonghoon Park

Monday, 11 May 2026 15:55
Session: Session 4
Room: Room G402 (4F)
Presentation Type: Oral Presentation

All presentation times are UTC + 9 (Asia/Tokyo)

Eurocentric paradigms, worldviews, and values are dominant epistemologies that drive architectural activities, shaping the fabric of society from the perspectives of both the Global North and, more significantly, the Global South. Focusing on the Southern African context, these values seem to create mono-narratives that not only influence the legitimisation of these ontologies but also the impact on contemporary adaptations of life. It is recognised that in the Global South, Indigenous peoples carry narratives that add value to the distinct cultures and communities from which they originate. However, the Eurocentric values conflict with indigenous practices. At the same time, contemporary Indigenous people remain invisible in public narratives (Weaver, 2022) and have minimal influence on architectural discourse and debates. Incorporating marginalised identities and their material cultures into the architectural canon would benefit not only their self-determination and affirmation of their invaluable contributions but also the advancement of knowledge (Harriss et al., 2022). Bungoma practices, a Southern African divinity healing practice rooted in spiritual, ancestral, and sensorial knowledge, offer an alternative epistemological and methodological framework. This paper proposes sensory and spiritually charged methodological strategies and tools that emerge from Bungoma’s philosophical practices and ancestralities. Two contextual sites are discussed in distinct settings in urban and rural landscapes of South Africa through a sonic reading and the ways such diverse spaces are influenced by soundscapes. The paper makes the claim that such an inquiry reveals alternative ways of practicing architecture centred on relationality, community(Ubuntu) ethics, place, and embodied practices.

Authors:
Mahoati Arthur Lehloenya, University of Johannesburg, South Africa


About the Presenter(s)
Mr Mahoati Arthur Lehloenya is currently a junior lecturer at the Department of Architecture, University of Johannesburg, South Africa. I am enrolled in the PhD programme in the School of Arts at the University of Witwatersrand, Johannesburg.

Connect on Linkedin
https://www.linkedin.com/in/arthur-lehloenya-286a0568/

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Posted by James Alexander Gordon

Last updated: 2023-02-23 23:45:00