The Place of the Mosque: Genealogies of Space, Knowledge, and Power
English
By (author): Akel Ismail Kahera
The Place of the Mosque: Genealogies of Space, Knowledge, and Power extends Foucaults analysis, Of Other Spaces, and the ideological conflicts which underlie the controversies of our day [and] take place between pious descendants of time and tenacious inhabitants of space. This book uses Foucaults framework to illuminate how mosques have been threatened in the past, from the Cordóba Mosque in the eighth century, to the development of Moorish aesthetics in the United States in the nineteenth century, to the clashes surrounding the building of mosques in the West in the twentieth and twenty-first centuries. Akel Kahera uses Foucaults genealogy to elaborate on and study the subjects that are caught in the emergence of a battlethe social and political will to power, the networks of power, and the rituals of powerwithin the interstitial space. In going beyond individual buildings to broader geographical and genealogical dimensions of the power struggles, The Place of the Mosque reconciles the public space experience, governmentality, and micro powers, paving the way for a new philosophical language. Expanding architectural and urban regional approaches, Kahera shows the biopolitical significance of the problem of space.
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