Integrating the Medieval Iberian Peninsula and North Africa in Islamic Architectural History

被引:1
|
作者
Anderson, Glaire D. [1 ]
机构
[1] Univ N Carolina, Art Dept, Chapel Hill, NC 27599 USA
来源
JOURNAL OF NORTH AFRICAN STUDIES | 2014年 / 19卷 / 01期
关键词
Islamic architecture; Qayrawan; Cordoba; mosques; Umayyad; Aghlabid;
D O I
10.1080/13629387.2013.862775
中图分类号
K9 [地理];
学科分类号
0705 ;
摘要
How do Islamic art survey texts present the architecture of the Islamic West, and how does this presentation shape the perception of the Maghrib in university classrooms? Examining the Great Mosque of Qayrawan and the Great Mosque of Cordoba as they appear in four representative and widely used art history survey texts, this article argues that a common art historical narrative characterises the art of early medieval North Africa as ultimately derivative of and artistically inferior to the art of early Islamic Iraq, Egypt, and the Iberian Peninsula. The article points to a shared chronological moment, which witnessed the expansion of the Cordoba prayer hall during the reign of 'Abd al-Rahman II and several building projects undertaken around the same time by the Aghlabid emirs of Ifriqiya. Examining these two building programmes in relation to one another leads to different conclusions about these monuments of the Islamic West than are offered in the art history texts, which privilege formalist readings. The article proposes the utility of a pan-Straits approach emphasising specific contexts (historical, political, religious, social, and artistic) within the Islamic West in addressing the problematic issues raised by this narrative. Such an approach, especially if combined with critical studies of the colonial structures that informed early scholarship on the Islamic West, may offer a means for the discipline to re-evaluate the place of the Maghrib in the larger history of Islamic art. It may also provide a means to move beyond problematic inherited discourses of Islamic art history and its canon.
引用
收藏
页码:83 / 92
页数:10
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [31] SPINA Region (South of Iberian Peninsula, North of Africa) GNSS Geodynamic Model
    Rosado, B.
    Barbero, I.
    Jimenez, A.
    Paez, R.
    Prates, G.
    Fernandez-Ros, A.
    Garate, J.
    Berrocoso, M.
    [J]. INTERNATIONAL SYMPOSIUM ON EARTH AND ENVIRONMENTAL SCIENCES FOR FUTURE GENERATIONS, 2018, 147 : 331 - 337
  • [33] CONTAGION IN ISLAMIC LANDS: Responses from Medieval Andalusia and North Africa
    Hopley, Russell
    [J]. JOURNAL FOR EARLY MODERN CULTURAL STUDIES, 2010, 10 (02) : 45 - 64
  • [34] Cynophagy, homosexuality and anthropophagy in medieval Islamic North Africa as signs of hospitality
    Mansouri, Mabrouk
    [J]. JOURNAL OF NORTH AFRICAN STUDIES, 2015, 20 (02): : 128 - 142
  • [35] A history of slavery in the Iberian peninsula
    Lahon, D
    [J]. HISTOIRE SOCIALE-SOCIAL HISTORY, 2002, 35 (69): : 275 - 277
  • [36] History of slavery in the Iberian peninsula
    Trexler, RC
    [J]. JOURNAL OF MODERN HISTORY, 2002, 74 (04): : 827 - 829
  • [37] Glassmaking in medieval technical literature in the Iberian Peninsula
    Govantes-Edwards, David J.
    Lopez Rider, Javier
    Duckworth, Chloe
    [J]. JOURNAL OF MEDIEVAL IBERIAN STUDIES, 2020, 12 (02) : 267 - 291
  • [38] The early medieval castles in the northwest of the Iberian Peninsula
    Christie, Neil
    [J]. Medieval Archaeology, 2014, 58 (01) : 418 - 419
  • [39] Staging the Liturgy: The Medieval Altarpiece in the Iberian Peninsula
    de Leeuw, Elizabeth
    [J]. JOURNAL OF THEOLOGICAL STUDIES, 2010, 61 : 839 - 841
  • [40] Medieval livestock breeding in the Iberian Peninsula.
    Arias Sanchez, Beatriz
    [J]. HISPANIA-REVISTA ESPANOLA DE HISTORIA, 2006, (224): : 1150 - 1155