Islamic Architecture in Iran. Poststructural Theory and the Architectural History of Iranian Mosques
English Text.
London, 2011; clothbound, pp. 288, col. ill., cm 17x28.
ISBN: 1-84885-729-2
- EAN13: 9781848857292
Subject: Essays (Art or Architecture)
Extra: Islamic Art and Culture
Languages:
Weight: 0.46 kg
The architecture of the Islamic world is predominantly considered in terms of a dual division between 'tradition' and 'modernity' - a division which, Saeid Khaghani here argues, has shaped and limited the narrative applied to this architecture. Khaghani introduces and reconsiders the mosques of eighth- to fifteenth-century Iran in terms of poststructural theory and developments in historiography in order to develop a brand new dialectical framework. Using the examples of mosques such as the Friday Mosques in Isfahan and Yazd as well as the Imam mosque in Isfahan, Khaghani presents a new way of thinking about and discussing Islamic architecture, making this valuable reading for all interested in the study of the art, architecture and material culture of the Islamic world.