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Empire Building: Orientalism and Victorian Architecture

Mark Crinson
TLDR
The Empire Building as discussed by the authors is a study of how and why Western architecture was exported to the Middle East and how Islamic and Byzantine architectural ideas and styles impacted on the West, through writers such as Ruskin and buildings such as the Crystal Palace.
Abstract
The colonial architecture of the nineteenth century has much to tell us of the history of colonialism and cultural exchange. Yet, these buildings can be read in many ways. Do they stand as witnesses to the rapacity and self-delusion of empire? Are they monuments to a world of lost glory and forgotten convictions? Do they reveal battles won by indigenous cultures and styles? Or do they simply represent an architectural style made absurdly incongruous in relocation? Empire Building is a study of how and why Western architecture was exported to the Middle East and how Islamic and Byzantine architectural ideas and styles impacted on the West. The book explores how far racial theory and political and religious agendas guided British architects (and how such ideas were resisted when applied), and how Eastern ideas came to influence the West, through writers such as Ruskin and buildings such as the Crystal Palace. Beautifully written and lavishly illustrated, Empire Building takes the reader on an extraordinary postcolonial journey, backwards and forwards, into the heart and to the edge of empire.

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Journal ArticleDOI

Iconic architecture and capitalist globalization

Leslie Sklair
- 18 Aug 2006 - 
TL;DR: Leslie Sklair as mentioned in this paper discusses the production of architectural iconicity and its relationship to contemporary capitalist globalization, and accounts for this historical shift with reference to an analysis of the new conditions of architectural production associated with the agents and institutions of an emergent transnational capitalist class.
Journal ArticleDOI

Contending Visions of the Middle East: The History and Politics of Orientalism

TL;DR: In this article, the authors present a survey of the history of Orientalism: In the beginning 2. Islam, the West and the rest 3. Orientalism and empire 4. The American century 5. Turmoil in the field 6. After Orientalism?
Journal ArticleDOI

The mosque in the suburbs: Negotiating religion and ethnicity in South London

TL;DR: This paper explored the historical unfolding of a complex politics of identity and difference across one particular site of religious worship, London Fazl Mosque, London's first mosque, focusing on two periods in the architectural, social and religious life of the site: its initial planning, opening and use in the London suburbs of the 1920s; and the community's more recent--and ultimately unsuccessful--attempts to extend the mosque in the 1990s.
Journal ArticleDOI

The Transnational Contexts of Early Twentieth-Century American Urban Segregation

TL;DR: This article studied the debates surrounding Baltimore's 1910 segregation ordinance in transnational context and found that three interconnected and transnationally traded political conversations were critical to urban segregationist discourse in places with otherwise very different histories: conflict between races, solutions of urban problems, and control of urban property markets.
Dissertation

Las maquetas de la Alhambra en el siglo XIX: una fuente de difusión y de información acerca del conjunto Nazarí

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors propose a solution to solve the problem of concurrence of 2.15.15-16.0.0-0.00-1.0