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List of Illustrations | vii | |
Preface | xi | |
1. | Vision and Power: An Introduction | 1 |
2. | Dayfa Khatun, Regent Queen and Architectural Patron | 17 |
3. | Princess Safwat al-Dunya wa al-Din and the Production of Sufi Buildings and Hagiographies in Pre-Ottoman Anatolia | 35 |
4. | Gender and Sexual Propriety in Ottoman Royal Women's Patronage | 53 |
5. | The Yeni Valide Mosque Complex of Eminonu, Istanbul (1597-1665): Gender and Vision in Ottoman Architecture | 69 |
6. | Women's Wealth and Styles of Giving: Perspectives from Buddhist, Jain, and Mughal Sites | 91 |
7. | Gendered Patronage: Women and Benevolence during the Early Safavid Empire | 123 |
8. | Public and Private for Ottoman Women of the Nineteenth Century | 155 |
9. | Mirrors Out, Mirrors In: Domestication and Rejection of the Foreign in Late-Ottoman Women's Magazines | 177 |
10. | "Nothing Romantic about It!" A Critique of Orientalist Representation in the Installations of Houria Niati | 205 |
Bibliography | 227 | |
About the Authors | 237 | |
Index | 239 |
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Add Women, Patronage, and Self-Representation in Islamic Societies, Ten papers from a 1996 meeting of the College Art Association in Boston comprise a textbook for courses on gender and Islamic gender visual studies. Historians, art historians, and area scholars explore how Muslim women have expressed and do express thems, Women, Patronage, and Self-Representation in Islamic Societies to the inventory that you are selling on WonderClubX
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Add Women, Patronage, and Self-Representation in Islamic Societies, Ten papers from a 1996 meeting of the College Art Association in Boston comprise a textbook for courses on gender and Islamic gender visual studies. Historians, art historians, and area scholars explore how Muslim women have expressed and do express thems, Women, Patronage, and Self-Representation in Islamic Societies to your collection on WonderClub |