We can't find the internet
Attempting to reconnect
Something went wrong!
Hang in there while we get back on track
Price loading...
Imagining Antiquity in Islamic Societies (Critical Studies in Architecture of the Middle East)
Price data last checked 103 day(s) ago - refreshing...
Price History & Forecast
No Price Data Available
Price history will appear here once data is collected from Amazon.
Price Distribution
No price data available for histogram
Description
In the aftermath of the deliberate destruction of cultural heritage pursued by Islamist groups like ISIS, many observers have erroneously come to associate Islamic doctrine and practice with such acts. 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 own heritage has been framed and experienced over time. This is a new collection of articles previously available in issues of the International Journal of Islamic Architecture. The tragically familiar spectacles of cultural heritage destruction performed by the Islamic State group (ISIS) in Syria and Iraq are frequently presented as barbaric, baffling, and far outside the bounds of what are imagined to be normative, 'civilized' uses of the past. 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, analysis of these spectacles of heritage violence posits two things: that there is, fact, an 'Islamic' manner of imagining the past – its architectural manifestations, its traces and localities – and that actions carried out at these localities, whether constructive or destructive, have moral or ethical consequences for Muslims and non-Muslims alike. In this reading, the iconoclastic actions of ISIS and similar groups, for example the Taliban or the Wahhabi monarchy in Saudi Arabia, are represented as one, albeit extreme, manifestation of an assumedly pervasive and historically on-going Islamic antipathy toward images and pre-contemporary holy localities in particular, and, more broadly, toward the idea of heritage and the uses to which it has been put by modern nationalism. But long before the emergence of ISIS and other so-called Islamist iconoclasts, and perhaps as early as the rise of Islam itself, 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. Ancient statuary were deployed as talismans, paintings were interpreted to foretell and reify the coming of Islam, and temples of ancient gods and churches devoted to holy saints were converted into mosques in ways that preserved their original meaning and, sometimes, even their architectural ornament and fabric. Often, such localities were valued simply as places that elicited a sense of awe and wonder, or of reflection on the present relevance of history and the greatness of past empires, a theme so prevalent it created distinct genres of Arabic and Persian literature (aja’ib, fada’il). Sites like Ctesiphon, the ancient capital of the Zoroastrian Sasanians, or the Temple Mount, where the Jewish temple had stood, were embraced by early companions of the Prophet Muhammad and incorporated into Islamic notions of the self. Furthermore, various Islamic interpretive communities as well as Jews and Christians often shared holy places and had similar haptic, sensorial, and ritual connections that enabled them to imagine place in similar ways. These engagements were often more dynamic and purposeful than conventional scholarly notions of 'influence' and 'transmission' can account for. And yet, Muslims also sometimes destroyed ancient places or powerfully reimagined them to serve their own purposes, as for example in the aftermath of the Crusader presence in the Holy Land or in the destruction, reuse and rebuilding of ancient Buddhist and Hindu sites in the Eastern Islamic lands and South Asia. This volume presents thirteen essays by leading scholars that address the issue of Islamic interest in the material past of the ancient and Islamic world, with essays examining attitudes about antiquarianism in the Islamic world from medieval times to the present. Main readership will be among scholars, graduate and undergraduate students, researchers, educators and academic libraries working or studying in the fields of the ancient world, antiquities, heritage and the Islamic world.
Product Specifications
- Format
- hardcover
- ASIN
- 1789385482
- Category
- Books > Subjects > Arts & Photography > Architecture > Types of Architecture > Religious Buildings
- Domain
- Amazon UK
- Release Date
- 22 July 2022
- Listed Since
- 12 October 2021
Barcode
No barcode data available
Similar Products You Might Like
94% match
The Archaeology of Islam (Social Archaeology)
Wiley-Blackwell
£96.99
24 Feb 2026
94% match
Islamic Architecture Today and Tomorrow: (Re)Defining the Field (Critical Studies in Architecture of the Middle East)
Intellect (UK)
£100.52
07 Jan 2026
93% match
Islam in the Middle East: A Living Tradition
Wiley-Blackwell
£87.89
21 Feb 2026
93% match
The Destruction of Cultural Property as a Weapon of War: ISIS in Syria and Iraq
Springer
£99.53
06 Mar 2026
93% match
Decolonizing Islamic Art in Africa: New Approaches to Muslim Expressive Cultures (Critical Studies in Architecture of the Middle East)
£86.80
09 Jan 2026
93% match
The Friday Mosque in the City: Liminality, Ritual, and Politics (Critical Studies in Architecture of the Middle East)
Intellect (UK)
£72.51
02 Mar 2026
93% match
The Medieval Mediterranean between Islam and Christianity: Crosspollinations in Art, Architecture, and Material Culture
£52.42
14 Jan 2026
93% match
Landscapes of the Islamic World: Archaeology, History, and Ethnography
University of Pennsylvania Museum Publications
£9.00
13 Jan 2026
93% match
Islamic Art and Visual Culture: An Anthology of Sources
Wiley
£65.69
07 Mar 2026
93% match
Routledge Cities in the Pre-Modern Islamic World - Academic Book
Routledge
£140.69
20 Apr 2026
93% match
The Idols of ISIS – From Assyria to the Internet
University of Chicago Press
£74.91
07 Mar 2026
93% match
Muslim Diversity: Local Islam in Global Contexts: 26 (Nias Studies in Asian Topics)
Routledge
£132.02
07 Mar 2026
93% match
Islam's Renewal: Reform or Revolt? (St Antony's Series)
MACMILLAN
£63.20
28 Feb 2026
93% match
Envisioning the Past: Archaeology an the Image: 19 (New Interventions in Art History)
Wiley-Blackwell
£97.85
09 Mar 2026
93% match
Saints and Their Pilgrims in Iran and Neighbouring Countries (The Anthropology of Persianate Societies): 1
Sean Kingston Publishing
£55.00
15 Feb 2026
93% match
Historical Consciousness and the Use of the Past in the Ancient World
Equinox
£94.99
21 Feb 2026
93% match
Islam, Jews and the Temple Mount: The Rock of Our/Their Existence (Routledge Studies in Middle Eastern Politics)
Routledge
£136.27
07 Mar 2026
93% match
World Islam: Critical Concepts in Islamic Studies
Routledge
£1,058.00
10 Dec 2025
93% match
Controlling the Past, Owning the Future: The Political Uses of Archaeology in the Middle East
University of Arizona Press
£43.83
01 Mar 2026
93% match
New Materialisms Ancient Urbanisms
Routledge
£115.78
25 Jan 2026
93% match
Visions of Community in the Post-Roman World: The West, Byzantium and the Islamic World, 300–1100
Routledge
£117.10
08 Mar 2026
93% match
Early Islamic Art, 650–1100: Constructing the Study of Islamic Art, Volume I: 1 (Variorum Collected Studies)
Routledge
£50.69
07 Mar 2026
92% match
Rethinking Islamic Studies: From Orientalism to Cosmopolitanism (Studies in Comparative Religion)
University of South Carolina Press
£63.95
21 Feb 2026
92% match
Routledge - The Anthropology of Islam Reader - Jens Kreinath
Routledge
£136.76
20 Apr 2026