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BOOKS
Author Hamdouni Alami, Mohammed

Title Art and architecture in the Islamic tradition : aesthetics, politics and desire in early Islam / Mohammed Hamdouni Alami

Publisher London ; New York : I.B. Tauris ; New York : Distributed in the United States and Canada by Palgrave Macmillan, 2011

Copies

LOCATION CALL # STATUS
 College of Marin - Kentfield General Collection  N6260 .H25 2011    CHECK SHELF
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Description xiii, 289 pages, [16] pages of plates : illustrations (some color) ; 23 cm
Format Book
Series Library of modern Middle East studies ; 104
Library of modern Middle East studies ; 104
Bibliog. Includes bibliographical references (pages 269-279) and index
Contents Introduction. Architecture and poetics ; The aims of this book -- Architecture and meaning in the theory of al-Jāḥiẓ. Architecture and meaning : al-Jāḥiẓ's view ; Aesthetic, variety and emotion ; Voice, body and emotion ; Al-Bayān, architecture and commemoration -- Architecture and poetics. Modus operandi ; Al-Khalil's theory of language ; Arabic poetics ; The palace and the Qaṣīda -- Architecture and myth. Ḥadīthu Sinimmār -- Al-Jāḥiẓ in the mosque at Damascus : social critique and debate in the history Umayyad architecture. Yaqubi's account ; Muqaddasi's account ; Architecture and hospitality ; 'Umar II : architecture and piety -- Architecture and desire. "Architects" or architectural planners ; The desire for architecture ; Architecture and misrecognition ; The travelling gaze : Ibn al-Jahm's eulogy of the palace al-Haruni ; Building, reflection and emptiness -- Conclusion
Summary Mohammed Hamdouni Alami argues that Islamic art has historically been excluded from Western notions of art; that the Western aesthetic tradition's preoccupation with the human body, and the ban on the representation of the human body in Islam, has meant that Islamic and Western art have been perceived as inherently at odds. However, the move away from this 'anthropomorphic aesthetic' in Western art movements, such as modern abstract and constructivist painting, has presented the opportunity for new ways of viewing and evaluating Islamic art and architecture
This book questions the very idea of art predicated on the anthropocentric bias of classical art, and the corollary 'exclusion' of Islamic art from the status of art. It addresses a central question in post-classical aesthetic theory, in as much as the advent of modern abstract and constructivist painting have shown that art can be other than the representation of the human body; that art is not neutral aesthetic contemplation but it is fraught with power and violence; and that the presupposition of classical art was not a universal truth but the assumption of a specific cultural and historical set of practices and vocabularies
Based on close readings of classical Islamic literature, philosophy, poetry, medicine and theology, along with contemporary Western art theory, the author uncovers a specific Islamic theoretical vision of art and architecture based on poetic practice, politics, cosmology and desire. In particular it traces the effects of decoration and architectural planning on the human soul as well as the centrality of the gaze in this poetic view - in Arabic 'nazar'- while examining its surprising similarity to modern theories of the gaze. --Book Jacket
Subject Islamic art -- History and criticism
Islamic architecture -- History and criticism
Islamic art -- Themes, motives
Islamic architecture -- Themes, motives
ISBN 9781848855441
1848855443
9781780765617
1780765614