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Book Cover for: Development, Architecture, and the Formation of Heritage in Late Twentieth-Century Iran: A Vital Past, Ali Mozaffari

Development, Architecture, and the Formation of Heritage in Late Twentieth-Century Iran: A Vital Past

Ali Mozaffari

Utilising an architectural lens, this book illustrates how development instigates interest in the past and in the process, creates heritage. It show multiple uses of the past and their contestation in highly fluid social contexts.

Book Details

  • Publisher: Manchester University Press
  • Publish Date: Oct 13rd, 2020
  • Pages: 304
  • Language: English
  • Edition: undefined - undefined
  • Dimensions: 9.21in - 6.14in - 0.94in - 1.66lb
  • EAN: 9781526150158
  • Categories: History - Contemporary (1945 -)Middle East - IranPublic Policy - City Planning & Urban Development

About the Author

Ali Mozaffari is ARC DECRA Senior Research Fellow in the Alfred Deakin Institute for Citizenship & Globalisation at Deakin University

Nigel Westbrook is Associate Professor of Architecture at the University of Western Australia

Praise for this book

'Contestations, appropriations, and politicizations are increasingly becoming front and center in the conversation about heritage. This book is particularly valuable since it tackles these issues in the context of a modernizing Muslim society. Insightful and cross-disciplinary it opens new perspectives on issues that reach far beyond the borders of Iran.'
Mark Jarzombek, Professor of the History and Theory of Architecture, Massachusetts Institute of Technology

'The last decades of the twentieth century, encompassing the late Pahlavi regime and the early years after the Revolution, is still a poorly understood period in Iranian architecture. In their new book, Ali Mozaffari and Nigel Westbrook use notions of development and heritage to unravel architecture's complex intentions and practices. Avoiding more polemical accounts, the authors guide us with insight and wisdom through this fascinating period.'
Mark Crinson, Professor of Architectural History, Birkbeck, University of London