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El. knyga: Making of Modern Muslim Selves through Architecture

Edited by , Edited by (Stanford University)

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This collection seeks to explore alternative definitions of bounded identities, facilitating new approaches to spatial and architectural forms. Taking as its starting point the emergence of a new sense of boundary emerged from the post-19th century dissolution of large, heterogeneous empires into a mosaic of nation-states in the Islamic world. This new sense of boundaries has not only determined the ways in which we imagine and construct the idea of modern citizenship, but also redefines relationships between the nation, citizenship, cities and architecture.





It brings critical perspectives to our understanding of the interrelation between the accumulated flows and the evolving concepts of boundary in predominantly Muslim societies and within the global Muslim diaspora. Essays in this book seeks to investigate how architecture mediates the creation and deployment of boundaries and boundedness that have been devised to define, enable, obstruct, accumulate and/or control flows able to disrupt bounded territories or identities.





More generally, the book explores how architecture might be considered as a means to understand the relationship between flows and boundaries and its implication of defining modern self. The essays in this volume collectively address how the construction of self is primarily a spatial event and operated within the crucial nexus of power-knowledge-space.





Contributors investigate how architecture mediates the creation and deployment of boundaries and boundedness, how architecture might be considered as a means to understand the relationship between flows and boundaries and its implications for how we define the modern self.





 





 





Part of the Critical Studies in Architecture of the Middle East series. 
List of Figures vii



Acknowledgements xiii



Introduction: Confining Contingency 1



Farhan Karim



 



Chapter
1. Housing Others: Design and Identity in a Bedouin Village 21



Noam Shoked



Chapter
2. Building for the Lost Lands: Ottoman Architects in
Mandatory Palestine and the Case of Hassan Bey Mosque 51



Mujde Dila Gumusø



Chapter
3. The First Aussie Mosques: Mediating Boundaries despite the
White Australia Policy 77



Katharine Bartsch, Md. Mizanur Rashid, and Peter Scriver



Chapter
4. Architecture of Exclusion: The Savujbulagh-i Mukri Garrison,
Border-Making, and the Transformation of the Ottoman-Qajar Frontier 111



Nader Sayadi



Chapter
5. Staging Baghdad as a Problem of Development 139



Huma Gupta



Chapter
6. Tehrans Decentralization Project and the Emergence of
Modern Socio-Spatial Boundaries 167



Elmira Jafari and Carola Hein



Chapter
7. Reconstructing the Muslim Self in Diaspora: Socio-Spatial
Practices in Urban European Mosques 193



Elisabeth Becker



Chapter
8. The Search for the Mosque of Florence: A Space of
Negotiated Identities 219



Hanan Kataw



Chapter
9. The Rome Mosque and Islamic Center: A Case of
Diasporic Architecture in the Globalized Mediterranean 237



Theodore Van Loan and Eva-Maria Troelenberg



Chapter
10. One House of Worship with Many Rooves: Imposing Architecture to
Mediate Sunni, Alevi, and Gulenist Islam in Turkey 253



Angela Andersen



Chapter
11. Architectural Modes of Collective Identity: The Case
of Hizbullahs Mleeta Tourist Landmark of the Resistance in South Lebanon
277



Heike Delitz and Stefan Maneval



Chapter
12. The Bangladesh Liberation War Museum and the Inconclusivity of
Architecture 309



Anooradha Iyer Siddiqi



 



Contributor Biographies 353



Index 359
Farhan Karim is an associate professor in the School of Architecture and Design at the University of Kansas and the current president of the Society of Architectural and Urban Historians of Asia. He worked as an architect, interior designer and furniture designer in Bangladesh and Australia.





Patricia Blessing is associate professor of art and art history at Stanford University.