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Imagining Antiquity in Islamic Societies: Critical Studies in Architecture of the Middle East

Autor Stephennie Mulder
en Limba Engleză Hardback – 15 aug 2022
A history of Islamic interest in the material past of the ancient world. 

The tragic destruction of cultural heritage performed by ISIS in Syria and Iraq is often superficially explained as an attempt to stamp out idolatry or as a fundamentalist desire to revive and enforce a return to a purified monotheism. Analyses like these posit that there is an "Islamic" manner of imagining the past and that the iconoclastic actions of terrorist organizations are one, albeit extreme, manifestation of an assumedly pervasive and historically ongoing Islamic antipathy toward images and pre-contemporary holy localities. However, this is not the full picture. This book explores the diverse ways Muslims have engaged with the material legacies of ancient and pre-Islamic societies, as well as how Islam’s heritage has been framed and experienced over time. Long before the emergence of ISIS and other so-called Islamist iconoclasts, Muslims imagined Islamic and pre-Islamic antiquity and its localities in myriad ways: as sites of memory, spaces of healing, or places imbued with didactic, historical, and moral power. 
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Specificații

ISBN-13: 9781789385489
ISBN-10: 1789385482
Pagini: 294
Ilustrații: 118 halftones
Dimensiuni: 171 x 229 x 33 mm
Greutate: 0.79 kg
Editura: Intellect Ltd
Colecția Intellect Ltd
Seria Critical Studies in Architecture of the Middle East


Notă biografică

Stephennie Mulder is associate professor of Islamic art and architecture at the University of Texas at Austin. She is the author of The Shrines of the ‘Alids in Medieval Syria.  

Recenzii

"Imagining Antiquity in Islamic Societies makes for an interesting probe into the often complicated relationship between Islam’s nascent sense of self and its precursors as well as contemporary societies and cultures. Framed around the themes of faḍā’il (virtues) and ʿajā’ib (wonders), the authors explore Islamic responses to antiquity: its physical ruins, the incorporation of spolia into its new occupier’s architecture, the thorny issue of heritage from a historic perspective and bringing it up to the present and covering Abbasid Iraq, Yemen, Islamic India, Ottoman Greece, Palestine and Tunisia."