The Poetics of Arabian Sūqs : A Hermeneutic Reading of the Development of Arabian Sūqs from the Pre-Islamic Era to Present book cover
1st Edition

The Poetics of Arabian Sūqs
A Hermeneutic Reading of the Development of Arabian Sūqs from the Pre-Islamic Era to Present




ISBN 9781032267982
Published November 18, 2022 by Routledge
266 Pages 59 B/W Illustrations

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Book Description

This book investigates the history of Arabian sūqs from their pre-Islamic beginnings to the present. Collecting evidence from archaeological ruins, Islamic towns, modern cities, Arabic poetry, philosophical debates, political conflicts, puppet shows and the insights of modern-day market-goers, the book presents new and unforeseen interpretations of the Arabian sūq’s meaning and its transformation through time and place. The finding that such meaning is tied to ancient trade rituals, where temple and market presented a holistic socio-urban unit, re-questions some instrumental assumptions regarding the value of sūq-ness in Arabia’s everyday practices. Such a finding, which locates the fadaā/tareeq duality as a central theme in Arabia’s socio-urban discourse, emphasizes the importance of lived experiences and poetics as key sources for understanding socio-urban phenomena.

Table of Contents

List of Illustrations

Preface

Introduction: A Personal Impression, A Problem, A Method

The Sūq: A Personal Impression

The Sūq: An Epistemological Problem?

Towards a Hermeneutic Understanding of Arabian Space

Concluding Notes: Limitations and Delimitations

Chapter 1: Arab-ness in between Prejudice and Prehension

What is Arabia and Who are the Arabs?

Pre-Islamic Arabia and its many Arabs

Islamic Arabia: An Expanding Social Geography

Post-Islamic Arabia: A Reinvented Identity

Concluding Notes: Decolonizing Arabian Studies

Chapter 2: The Arabian Sūq in Contemporary Discourse

What is a Sūq?

The Sūq as a Political Space

The Sūq as a Religious Space

The Sūq as a Social Space

Concluding Notes: The Sūq an Urban Franchise?

Chapter 3: Pre-Islamic Arabia in-between fadaā and tareeq

The Pre-Islamic Situation: A Historical Overview

Pre-Islamic Arabia: An Archaeological Overview

Arabia Felix: Saba (4th BC – 275AD)

Arabia Petraea: Petra (c. 4th BC – 2ndAD)

Arabia Petraea: Hatra, or al-Hadar (c. 2nd BC - 241 AD)

Arabia Desertae: Qaryat al-Fau (c. 1st – 4th AD)

Arabia Desertae: Medina (c. 6th – 7thAD)

Language: Arabic in-between the Desert and the Trade Route

The Desert in Pre-Islamic Poetry

The Trade Route in Pre-Islamic Poetry

Lived Experience: Sūq-ness as ‘being-in-the-world’

Pre-Islamic Sūq-ness, Myth and Rituals

Concluding Notes: Pre-Islamic Sūqs in-between fadaā and tareeq

 

 

 

Chapter 4: Islamic Arabia in-between tajalli and wahm

Historical Context: Arabia of the 7th century

Arabic Language and the Islamic Situation

Islamic Sūqs: An Urban Overview

The Umayyads’ Kairouan, Tunisia (670AD)

The Abbasids’ Baghdad, Iraq (762AD)

The Fatimids’ Qahira, Egypt (969AD)

Language: Poetics of the Islamic City

Lived Experience: Islamic Sūqs in-between tajalli and al-wahm

The Islamic Sūq as a Sufist Journey

The Islamic Sūq as a Political Playground

Concluding Notes: The Islamic City in-between Horizons

Chapter 5: Post-Islamic Arabia in-between Tradition and Progress

Historical Context: Pan-Arabism vs. Pan-Islamism

Post-Islamic Urban Developments: Case Studies

Baron Empain’s Heliopolis, Cairo

King Faisal II’s Plan of Greater Baghdad

Al Maktoum’s Dubai

The Poetics of Sūq-ness in Post-Islamic Arabia

Lived Experience: Post-Islamic Sūq-ness and its Variations

Dubai’s Social Perception: A Surveyand Visual Study

Sūq Rituals in-between the Festive and the Ordinary

Post-Islamic Sūq-ness in-between Tradition and Modernity

Concluding Notes: Post-Islamic Sūq-ness and the Predicament of Progress

Chapter 6: The Arabian Sūq’s Past, Present and Future

The Arabian Space and the Problem of Method

The Arabian Sūq and the fadaā/tareeq Duality

Poetics, Identity and Nostalgia in Arabian Sūqs

The Sūq as a Passageway

Bibliography

Index

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Author(s)

Biography

Jasmine Shahin is a Dubai-based interior architect and university professor, teaching interior design and architectural history/theory in several institutions. In 2000, Shahin graduated from the American University in Dubai, after which she trained with one of the largest local firms in the Middle East. In 2007, she joined De Montfort University in Leicester, UK, where she received both her MPhil (2010) and PhD (2020) in Architectural and Urban Theory. Shahin has produced several publications and has presented many papers at international conferences. Her academic publications focus on the importance of hermeneutics for understanding the development of historical places in relation to contingent social experiences. She founded NU Design Bureau in 2020, complementing her academic experience with a strong pool of successful projects.