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Kanan Makiya

    This author explores the intricate intersections of identity, exile, and political engagement, often drawing from personal experience. His work delves into the deep cultural and historical currents that shape both individuals and societies. Through his writing, he seeks to understand the complex dynamics of the Middle East and its place in the world. His prose is incisive and reflective, inviting readers to contemplate the complexities of modern history and personal experience.

    Republic of Fear
    Post-Islamic Classicism: A Visual Essay
    • Post-Islamic Classicism: A Visual Essay

      • 160 pages
      • 6 hours of reading

      Metamorphosing “dead” Abbasid forms into living modern architecture lies at the roots of Mohamed Makiya’s classicism as an architect. This essay charts the stages of this metamorphosis from the Khulafa Mosque (1963) and the Kuwait State Mosque (one of the largest in the world) through to the vast and visionary schemes for Iraq of the late 1980s. Makijy’s formally complex and nuanced architecture, the author argues, is continuous, harmonious, and celebratory of an Islamic past. It is there too innocent, too romantic to be post-modern in its sensibility, nor does it assume the revolution in values that modernism brought in its wake. None the less, many of modernism’s discoveries about materials and space-making are deployed in an original way. The uneven combination between what is acquired from the modern, and mythologized about the past, is what makes Makiya’s architectural vision unique, so unlike that of any of his contemporaries. In the final analysis, the architecture’s dogged consistency in this regard is the source of its beauty.

      Post-Islamic Classicism: A Visual Essay
    • Examining Iraqi history in a search for clues to understanding contemporary political affairs, this title illustrates how the quality of Ba'thi pan- Arabism as an ideology, the centrality of the first experience of pan-Arabism in Iraq, and the interaction between the Ba'th and communist parties in Iraq from 1958 to 1968.

      Republic of Fear