Mohammad Gharipour - Architectural historic preservation has been used as a means to express or represent national, Islamic and even ethnic identity; and often this is linked to tourism or used to serve political ends, particularly in nation building. This article investigates agency and utility in the conservation and restoration of religious built environments in different societies in the Islamic world and its meaning to these societies today. It concludes that conservation should be interpreted more broadly than the physical continuity of historic structures; it should also enable the continuity of non-material aspects of culture and thus embody the relationship between faith and the built environment.

Architectural Conservation as a Tool for Cultural Continuity: A Focus on the Religious Built Environment of Islam

Type
journal article
Year
2013
Architectural historic preservation has been used as a means to express or represent national, Islamic and even ethnic identity; and often this is linked to tourism or used to serve political ends, particularly in nation building. This article investigates agency and utility in the conservation and restoration of religious built environments in different societies in the Islamic world and its meaning to these societies today. It concludes that conservation should be interpreted more broadly than the physical continuity of historic structures; it should also enable the continuity of non-material aspects of culture and thus embody the relationship between faith and the built environment.

Citation

Khan, Hasan-Uddin. "Architectural Conservation as a Tool for Cultural Continuity: A Focus on the Religious Built Environment of Islam." In International Journal of Islamic Architecture, Volume 2, Number 2 (pp. 251-270), edited by Mohammad Gharipour, Bristol: Intellect, 2013.

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Copyright

Intellect

Language

English