Description
Examines the emergence and development of Islamic spaces in contemporary Africa that are responding to the continent's increasingly global character.
About the Author
Michelle Apotsos is Associate Professor in African Art History at Williams College, where she specialises in Afro-Islamic architectural sites and landscapes. She is the author of Architecture, Islam, and Identity in West Africa: Lessons from Larabanga (2016) and has published in various journals including African Arts, the International Journal of Islamic Architecture, and Material Culture Review. She is a member of the African Studies Association, the Arts Council of the African Studies Association, the Society of Architectural Historians and the Global Architectural History Teaching Collaborative based at MIT.
Reviews
'As art history goes global, this book should be required reading for anyone studying Islamic architecture, self-fashioning, visual culture, and world-making. Michelle Apotsos presents diverse case studies in Africa, ranging widely across time, space and provocative conceptual terrain-from intersectionality to cyberpilgrimage. Such forward-thinking scholarship will surely transform collective understanding.' Holly Edwards, Williams College
'In this groundbreaking study-the first monograph to consider the mosque in contemporary Africa - Michelle Apotsos analyzes the social, political and cultural dynamics that have influenced the articulation of sacred space in Muslim communities on the continent. It is a welcome addition to the literature dealing with the visual cultures of Islam in Africa.' Raymond Silverman, University of Michigan
Book Information
ISBN 9781108461412
Author Michelle Moore Apotsos
Format Paperback
Page Count 306
Imprint Cambridge University Press
Publisher Cambridge University Press
Weight(grams) 448g
Dimensions(mm) 229mm * 152mm * 17mm