The Kaaba Orientations: Readings in Islam's Ancient House

Author:   Simon O'Meara
Publisher:   Edinburgh University Press
ISBN:  

9780748699308


Pages:   320
Publication Date:   23 June 2020
Format:   Hardback
Availability:   Temporarily unavailable   Availability explained
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The Kaaba Orientations: Readings in Islam's Ancient House


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Overview

The most sacred site of Islam, the Kaba (the granite cuboid structure at the centre of the Great Mosque of Mecca) is here investigated by examining six of its predominantly spatial effects: as the qibla (the direction faced in prayer); as the axis and matrix mundi of the Islamic world; as an architectural principle in the bedrock of this world; as a circumambulated goal of pilgrimage and site of spiritual union for mystics and Sufis; and as a dwelling that is imagined to shelter temporarily an animating force; but which otherwise, as a house, holds a void.

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Author:   Simon O'Meara
Publisher:   Edinburgh University Press
Imprint:   Edinburgh University Press
ISBN:  

9780748699308


ISBN 10:   0748699309
Pages:   320
Publication Date:   23 June 2020
Audience:   General/trade ,  General
Format:   Hardback
Publisher's Status:   Active
Availability:   Temporarily unavailable   Availability explained
The supplier advises that this item is temporarily unavailable. It will be ordered for you and placed on backorder. Once it does come back in stock, we will ship it out to you.

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Reviews

"Brilliant, daring and challenging on every single page, O'Meara's study of the Kaʿba's manifold meanings is one of the most inspiring, and inspired, books on Islamic cultural history I've read in a long time.-- ""Christian R. Lange, University of Utrecht"" Considering the Ka'ba as a cultural agent rather than as an architectural sign, this unprecedented study unites the centrality of the Ka'ba in Islamic faith with its importance in understanding the living and historic cultures of Islam. Through linguistic, archaeological, and historical analysis, it lays out the multiplicity of Islamic interpretation and practice across time and space as it converges on the very site that asserts its unity. Engaging with contemporary theories of religion, the work disturbs the epistemic premises that limit the interpretation of buildings through the rubric of architecture. Instead, it reframes the Ka'ba in terms of Islamic thought. Clear and engaging, this work will surely become indispensable for students and scholars of Islamic arts, Islamic Studies and Religious Studies.-- ""Wendy Shaw, Freie Universit�t Berlin"" Highly Recommended!--Seth Ward ""CHOICE"" In the absence of previous monographs on the subject, this book provides an excellent starting point, looking at six aspects of the Ka'ba based on comprehensive discussion and use of primary sources as well as artistic representations of the building.--Andrew Petersen ""International Association for the Study of Arabia"" Remarkably, this is the first book in English on Islam's most sacred structure - the Ka'ba in Mecca, the physical focus of every Muslim's daily prayers, the pivot of the world's largest annual pilgrimage. This is not an architectural history; instead it reveals the different strata in the building's many meanings, and the interactions between building and beholder, building and believer. O'Meara bravely straddles multiple disciplines to throw light on Muslim perspectives. While this book's primary importance lies in its subject, O'Meara's approach is novel and his final conclusion assertive: 'the decolonisation of Islamic art history awaits completion'.-- ""Julian Raby"" The first of its kind, O'Meara's monograph is a highly original study which has paved the path for not only for future studies of the Kaʿba but also for all studies of Islamic art and architecture that are grounded in Islamic culture and tradition.--Yahya Nurgat, University of Cambridge ""The American Journal of Islam and Society 37:3-4"" This book is indispensable for anyone engaged in Islamic studies in general, and Islamic art history in particular. [...] Not only does the book legitimate the Kaʿba as an object of art historical study, but also, in deconstructing some entrenchments, it does a considerable service to a scholarship in need of modernisation. To finish on this epistemic note, it cannot be stressed enough that O'Meara's rare interdisciplinary methodology and mode of reasoning ought to be heeded and emulated in any future research on Islamic art.--Valerie Gonzalez ""Al-Masāq"" This extraordinarily original book addresses the essential role of the Kaaba, the building in Mecca that is the central focus of Muslim devotion, in the orientation of Muslim life. O'Meara masterfully and sensitively deploys a vast range of sources - religious, historical, literary and visual - to explore and illuminate how this structure has functioned in the lives of Muslims over the past 1400 years.-- ""Jonathan Bloom, Boston College"" With deep erudition, yet sensitively and elegantly, The Kaʿba Orientations effects a subtle reorientation of the reader away from the diachronic, material-historical account that might have been expected, towards a more inward, psychological viewpoint that turns inside out the physical Kaʿba's refusal of access to its interior to all but a select few.--Garth Fowden ""BSOAS"" [This] is an overdue contribution to Islamic art scholarship and will prove a tour de force if also read by a more general readership, particularly amongst the Anglophone Muslim community.--Cleo Cantone ""The Muslim World Book Review Vol. 42, No. 2"""


Author Information

Simon O'Meara is an architectural historian of early to pre-modern urban Islamic culture, with a methodological interest in using the discourses of Islam to explore Islamic visuality and understand what scholarship can struggle to accommodate or see. He is Lecturer in the History of Architecture and Archaeology of the Islamic Middle East at SOAS, University of London.

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