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“Un neoclásico propio”: Trujillo’s National Palace and the Built Legacies of US Imperialism in the Dominican Republic, 1907–47

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posted on 2025-07-02, 03:16 authored by Joanna Merwood-SalisburyJoanna Merwood-Salisbury, Jose Nunez Collado
This paper examines how U.S. imperialism shaped the architectural landscape of the Dominican Republic in the early-twentieth century, culminating in the construction of the National Palace in 1947 under the authoritarian rule of Rafael Trujillo. Rather than viewing the Palace solely as a symbol of post-occupation sovereignty, we analyse it as an expression of un neoclásico propio—a Dominican version of neoclassicism. Built on the site of the plantation-style Customs Receiver’s residence that embodied the economic dominance of the US during the 1916-24 occupation, the Palace asserts a Dominican identity grounded in colonial heritage. We argue that this hybrid architectural language emerged through the very legacies it sought to overcome. Tracing the connections between colonial buildings, imperial infrastructure, and monumental nationalism, the paper reveals how Trujillo’s regime manipulated architecture to erase signs of US imperial control while reinforcing its own authoritarian ideology under the guise of cultural renaissance and national pride.

History

Preferred citation

Merwood-Salisbury, J. & Nunez Collado, J. (n.d.). “Un neoclásico propio”: Trujillo’s National Palace and the Built Legacies of US Imperialism in the Dominican Republic, 1907–47. Architectural Theory Review. https://doi.org/10.1080/13264826.2025.2520988

Journal title

Architectural Theory Review

Publisher

Taylor & Francis

Publication status

Published online

Contribution type

Article

Online publication date

2025-07-02

ISSN

1326-4826

eISSN

1755-0475

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