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Decolonizing Islamic Art in Africa: New Approaches to Muslim Expressive Cultures: Critical Studies in Architecture of the Middle East

Editat de Ashley Miller
en Limba Engleză Hardback – 4 dec 2024
New research explores Muslim arts and identities in postcolonial Africa.

This collection explores the dynamic place of Islamic art, architecture, and creative expression in processes of decolonization across the African continent in the twentieth and twenty-first centuries. Presenting new methodologies for accentuating African agency and expression in stories about Islamic art, it is a vital new contribution to recent widespread efforts to liberate the art historical canon.

Bringing together new work by leading specialists in the fields of African, Islamic, and modern arts and visual cultures, the book directs unprecedented attention to the contributions of African and Muslim artists in articulating modernities in local and international arenas. Interdisciplinary and transregional in scope, it enriches the under-told story of Muslim experiences and expression in Africa, which is home to nearly half a million Muslims, or a third of the global Muslim population.

Furthermore, the book elucidates the role of Islam and its expressive cultures in postcolonial articulations of modern identities and heritage, as expressed by a diverse range of actors and communities based in Africa and its diaspora. Countering notions of Islam as a retrograde or static societal phenomenon in Africa or elsewhere, contributors propose new methodologies for accentuating human agency and experience over superficial disciplinary boundaries in the stories we tell about art making and visual expression, thus contributing to widespread efforts to decolonize scholarship on histories of modern expression.
 
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Specificații

ISBN-13: 9781835950005
ISBN-10: 1835950000
Pagini: 316
Ilustrații: 74 color plates
Dimensiuni: 170 x 230 x 25 mm
Greutate: 0.85 kg
Editura: Intellect Ltd
Colecția Intellect Ltd
Seria Critical Studies in Architecture of the Middle East


Notă biografică

Ashley Miller is assistant curator of African art at the University of Michigan Museum of Art in Ann Arbor, Michigan.

Cuprins

Acknowledgements
Introduction: Un-Disciplining African Muslim Expressive Cultures
Ashley Miller
Part I – BEYOND BORDERS: African (and) Muslim Objects as ‘Relational Loci’
1. Dispersal, Decolonization, and Dominance: African Muslim Objects from the Swahili Sultanate of Witu (1858–1923)
Zulfikar Hirji
2. ‘A Land that Fulfils Dreams’: Rethinking Zanzibar’s Stone Town Beyond a Colonial Imaginary
Michelle Apotsos
Part II – DISOBEDIENT MEDIA: Reclaiming African Muslim Expressive Cultures
3. ‘Disobedient’ Perspectives on African Muslim Arts
Allen F. Roberts and Mary Nooter Roberts
4. Entanglements of Belonging: Regional and Global Bonds in an Urban Muslim Masquerade
Lisa Homann
5. Tattooing as Subversive Archive: Safaa Mazirh’s Reclamation of Tattoos in Postcolonial Morocco
Cynthia Becker
Part III – MOBILIZING HERITAGE: Painting Postcolonial Identities
6. Calligraphy in Mauritania: Creating a Lost Identity
Mark Dike DeLancey
7. Surrealist Possessions: Wifredo Lam, Abdel Hadi El-Gazzar, and Ibrahim El-Salahi
Alex Dika Seggerman
8. Cybernetics and Postcolonial Utopias
Holiday Powers
Part IV – UNDISCIPLINED CONSTRUCTIONS: Relocating ‘Islamic’ Architecture in Africa
9. Between Art and Architecture, Modernism and Makhzen
Emma Chubb
10. Kader Attia’s Alternative History of the Grands Ensembles, from France to Algeria and Back
Jacobé Huet
Index

Recenzii

"What I find most compelling about this book is that it moves beyond the well worn grand narratives in western art history such as the monumental architecture of ancient and medieval Egypt, and the Islamic dynasties that shaped the architecture of countries surrounding the Middle East, the Mediterranean and northern Africa. In this book, the relational influences demonstrate the porous nature of the African diaspora from West Africa across to the global diaspora of Cuba and France.

It is a book that is rich in wonderful case studies and a wide range of both historical and contemporary works by African artists and designers... [It is] very effective in its demonstration of the complexity of the Muslim, African and diasporic actors who have contributed to the evolution of art in Africa, specifically architecture. For teachers studying the impact of Islamic art and philosophy in the contemporary world in their classrooms beyond the well-trodden western art history texts, this may be a very informative read. I found it fascinating."