The Arab Revolution Takes Back the Public Space
In 1991, al-Sadiq al-Nayhum, a Libyan thinker exiled in Geneva, published a book of collected essays in Arabic with the provocative title Islam in Captivity: Who Stole the Mosque and Where Did Friday Disappear?2 The thesis of the book was not novel. Al-Nayhum posited that modernity had failed to tak...
Main Author: | Rabbat, Nasser (Contributor) |
---|---|
Other Authors: | Massachusetts Institute of Technology. Department of Architecture (Contributor) |
Format: | Article |
Language: | English |
Published: |
University of Chicago Press,
2013-12-05T18:29:46Z.
|
Subjects: | |
Online Access: | Get fulltext |
Similar Items
-
Three Years of Arabic Revolutions
by: Ana Ruth Vidal-Luengo
Published: (2015-06-01) -
The Arab Revolution of 2011 A Comparative Perspective
Published: (2015) -
Post-Revolution Urban Landscape: Transforming Public Spaces after 2011 Revolutions
by: Ana Medina Gavilanes
Published: (2017-10-01) -
Back to the Future: Sparta, Athena, and the battle for the Arab public sphere
by: Tarek Cherkaoui
Published: (2017-06-01) -
Are “the Arab revolutions” an event for Social Sciences?
by: Myriam Catusse, et al.
Published: (2017-12-01)