Bukhara And Samarkand
In: The City in the Islamic World, S. 491-524
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In: The City in the Islamic World, S. 491-524
In: The City in the Islamic World, S. 857-882
In: The City in the Islamic World, S. 999-1014
In: Digest of Middle East studies: DOMES, Band 32, Heft 2, S. 102-114
ISSN: 1949-3606
AbstractIn the last decades, contemporary urbanism in the global South has meant large urban transformations, tall architecture landmarks, and fierce city competition. However, cities and their planners are now confronting an ethical dilemma: how to grow and compete while caring for the disastrous impacts on Earth and human health caused by the mass extraction, processing, and consumption of resources linked to urbanization. In our article, we problematize the modern interpretation of technology, and in particular architecture and planning technologies, in society where sustainability is considered a product. By restudying the Quranic notion of the khalifa and the accidental, ecological formation of the oasis, we will argue for a postpromethean philosophy of inhabiting the Earth. We will exemplify this new ethical–technological shift by comparing planned and unplanned developments in Arabian Gulf cities.
In: Theory and method in Islamic architectural design
In: The Urban Book Ser.
Intro -- Foreword: Rethinking the 'Lived' Within the 'Urban' of the Middle Eastern City -- Contents -- Editors and Contributors -- 1 Towards New Directions for Public Spaces in the Globalising Middle East -- References -- Part I The Right to City and Conceptualisations of Public Spaces -- 2 Space Production in Times of Neoliberalism -- 2.1 The Right to the City: Theory and Definition -- 2.2 Evolution of Spatial Production, Collective Occupation of Space and the Right to the City -- 2.3 The First City: The Space of Contact -- 2.4 The Second City: The Space of Spectacle -- 2.5 The Third City: The City of Movements, the Urban Space -- 2.6 The Fourth City: The Space of Information, and the Space of Human Rights -- 2.7 Case Study: Re-reading the Right to the City in Tehran, Iran -- 2.8 Discussion and Conclusion -- References -- 3 Transnational Urban Space in the Global South: Cases from Qatar and Malaysia -- 3.1 Introduction -- 3.2 Economic Restructuring in the Global South: The Cases of Qatar and Johor, Malaysia -- 3.2.1 The Rise of Qatar's Economic and Geopolitical Ambitions -- 3.2.2 Johor as Part of the Straits Megacity Region -- 3.3 Case Study #1: The "Public" Space of Qatar Foundation -- 3.4 Case Study #2: The Transit Space of Iskandar Malaysia -- 3.5 Conclusions -- References -- 4 Beirut: Place of Post-crisis -- 4.1 Beirut: Spaces of Dynamic Reconstruction -- 4.2 The Project: Quality and Insecurity of Places -- 4.3 The Project: Dialogue and Discontinuity of Places -- 4.4 Reconsidering Karm El-Zeitoun Area -- 4.5 Riverside 2404, Dialogue between Deaf Places -- 4.6 End of Time-Places -- 5 Private and Public Spaces in the Middle East: Urban Contaminations -- 5.1 Beirut -- 5.2 Dubai -- References -- 6 Looking for the Liberal in the Neo-Liberal City [Alternative Public Spaces from Lebanon] -- 6.1 Introduction.
In: Handbook of Oriental studies. Section 1, The Near and Middle East v. 94
In: Handbook of Oriental studies. Section 1, The Near and Middle East, v. 94
Draws attention to the sites of life, politics and culture where different generations of the Islamic world have made their mark. This book not only includes snapshots of historical fabric but also deals with the transformation of this fabric into modern and contemporary urban entities.
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