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Islamic Architecture Today and Tomorrow: (Re)Defining the Field [Kietas viršelis]

Edited by , Edited by (University of Maryland)
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Through Islamic Architecture Today and Tomorrow, established experts, designers, and newer scholars from the world of Islamic architecture, broadly conceived, consider the fields changing nature and continued relevance in our rapidly globalizing context. Reflective essays address the meaning of Islamic in built environments, as well as the geographical, chronological, and disciplinary diversity of a dynamic field of study that encompasses far more than mosques and tombs. Essays address the use and interpretation of historic structures and spaces, in addition to contemporary design, conservation, and touristic experience, as well as research, publication, and pedagogical practices.





It introduces scholars and practitioners to the state of Islamic architecture as a field of inquiry and provides a snapshot of the issues and challenges facing the field today. Looking forward, it invites readers to consider built environments in Islamic contexts as integral to global systems from an interdisciplinary and inclusive perspective. While this volume offers nuanced perspectives on a host of pressing questions, it ultimately aims to advance a necessarily on-going conversation.





The book will have wide appeal among architectural historians, art historians, and other scholars working on material in the traditional Islamic regions of the world (North Africa, the Middle East, and South Asia) and beyond, as well as scholars of religion and society. Practicing architects, landscape architects, planners, preservationists, and heritage managers in the regions addressed may also be interested in the volume. Essays have been written with non-specialist and student readers in mind. Undergraduate, graduate, and design students may use selected essays, or the entire collection, in university or graduate school coursework in architecture and Middle Eastern or Islamic studies.
List of Figures
xi
Acknowledgements xvii
Introduction. The Changed and Changing Field of `Islamic Architecture' 1(8)
Mohammad Gharipour
Daniel E. Coslett
Part 1 Research and Scholarship
9(46)
Chapter 1 The Study of Islamic Architecture: Reflections on an Expanding Field
11(18)
Sheila S. Blair
Jonathan M. Bloom
Chapter 2 Widening the Horizons for the Study of Islamic Architecture
29(14)
Bernard O'Kane
Chapter 3 Modern Architecture and Colonialism in the Islamic World
43(12)
Brian L. McLaren
Part 2 Scope and Scale
55(58)
Chapter 4 From Garden to Landscape: Lessons from the Taj and the Alhambra
57(12)
D. Fairchild Ruggles
Chapter 5 Invisible Geographies in the Study of Islamic Architecture
69(10)
Abidin Kusno
Chapter 6 Silencing Palestinian Architectural History in Israel: Reflections on Scholarship and Activism
79(14)
Alona Nitzan-Shiftan
Chapter 7 Islamic Architecture in the Americas: Advancing a Transregional and Hemispheric Approach
93(20)
Caroline `Olivia' M. Wolf
Part 3 Historiography and Context
113(46)
Chapter 8 Cultural Encounters, Local Practice, and Historical Process in the Ancient Middle East
115(10)
Dell Upton
Chapter 9 Neo-Eurocentrism and Science: Implications for the Historiography of Islamic Art and Architecture
125(16)
Samer Akkach
Chapter 10 Carving an Epistemological Space for Southeast Asia: Historiographical and Critical Engagements
141(18)
Imran bin Tajudeen
Part 4 Fieldwork and Documentation
159(44)
Chapter 11 A Field without Fieldwork: Sustaining the Study of Islamic Architecture in the Twenty-First Century
161(14)
Nancy Urn
Chapter 12 Architectural History in Turkey: Between Fieldwork and Archival Research
175(14)
Patricia Blessing
Chapter 13 Documenting Islamic Architecture: Objectives and Outcomes in a Time of War
189(14)
Sharon C. Smith
Part 5 Education and Pedagogy
203(42)
Chapter 14 Reorienting Perspectives: Why I Do Not Teach a Course Titled `Islamic Architecture'
205(16)
Jelena Bogdanovic
Chapter 15 Decolonizing Architectural Knowledge: Situating Middle Eastern Pedagogies in a Globalizing World
221(12)
Ashraf M. Salama
Chapter 16 Educating the Public about Islamic Art and Architecture through
233(12)
Museums Sheila R. Canby
Part 6 Curation and Publication
245(64)
Chapter 17 Displaying Islamic Arts in Global Cities
247(12)
Jorge Correia
Chapter 18 Curatingthe `Islamic': The Personal and the Political
259(12)
Leslee Katrina Michelsen
Chapter 19 Islamic Architecture on the Move: Publishing Architectural History in the Digital Age
271(14)
Nancy Micklewright
Chapter 20 Illustrating Islamic Architecture: On Visual Presentation and Scholarship
285(24)
Lorenz Korn
Part 7 Globalization and Change
309(44)
Chapter 21 Uneven Geographies and Neoliberal Urban Transformation in Arab Cities
311(14)
Rami F. Daher
Chapter 22 Affection for Nouvel Architecture: On Contemporary (Islamic) Architecture and Affect
325(14)
Sebnem Yucel
Chapter 23 The `Islamic-Modern' Project in this Age of Uncertainty
339(14)
Vikramaditya Prakash
Part 8 Experience and Use
353(46)
Chapter 24 The Tourist Gaze, Visiting Mosques, and the Folds of Architecture
355(16)
Elif Kalaycioglu
Waleed Hazbun
Chapter 25 Decolonizing the Conservation of Islamic Built Heritage in Egypt
371(16)
Hossam Mahdy
Chapter 26 (Dis)placement and Placemaking: Reconsidering Islamic Architecture through Refugee Agency
387(12)
Kivanq Kihng
Bulent Batuman
Part 9 Practice and Profession
399(54)
Chapter 27 `Islamic Architecture' and the Profession
401(8)
Nasser Rabbat
Chapter 28 A Trinity of Values in Architecture for Muslim Societies
409(12)
Rasem Badran
Chapter 29 Relevance, Tradition, and Practice in Islamic Architecture
421(14)
Kamil Khan Mumtaz
Chapter 30 Architectural Competitions: Creating Dialogues and Promoting
435(18)
Excellence Hasan-Uddin Khan
Contributor Biographies 453(8)
Index 461
Mohammad Gharipour is an architectural historian and professor of architecture at Morgan State University in Baltimore, USA. In addition to publishing thirteen books, including Epidemic Urbanism (Intellect, 2021), he is the founding editor of the International Journal of Islamic Architecture.





Daniel E. Coslett, is a historian of architecture and urban planning whose work focuses on the intersections of design, heritage management, and tourism in North Africa. He teaches art and architectural history and has published on colonial and postcolonial architecture in Tunisia and beyond.