The Visual World of Muslim India: The Art, Culture and Society of the Deccan in the Early Modern Era
Between the fourteenth and eighteenth centuries, the Deccan stood at the crossroads of far-reaching commercial and diplomatic networks, which ranged from Arabia and Iran to East Asia. Incresingly, these networks served as a conduit for European colonial expansion, and in the process the Deccan fell into the orbit of European interests. Its position and links to a wide variety of ultural influences produced in the Deccan an immensely rich visual culture. This was shaped further by the dynamic encounters between the different versions of Islam patronised by the ruling dynasties of the period, as well as by diverse local linguistic, religious and artistic traditions in the region. The Visual World of Muslim India is a richly illustrated and comprehensive exploration of the art of the late medieval and early modern Deccan. It explores the ways in which court art, artefacts and built environments were created and experienced, the reasons behind their creation, and the other agencies involved besides and beyond the court.Beginning with the idea of large spaces experienced by a range of subjects on a daily basis, this book continues with examples of architecture and architectural decoration that affirmed peculiar identities or beliefs, and finally considers some artefacts that played a role in court diplomacy as well as everydy life.
It therefore commences with an examination of the visual landscapes of the Deccan, including the magnificent Qutb Shahi capital of Golconda as well as smaller, less-known structures which constituted the 'city' in the early modern Deccan. There is also a focus on painting and painters, and their intersections with court policy and diplomacy, such as the earliest illustrated Dakani Urdu diwan- a collection of poems composed by a ruler of the Golconda kingsom. Muhammad- Quli Qutb Shah. The last section of the book leaves the boundaries of the courts and looks at the wider patterns of circulation of goods and ideas, highlighting the momentous social changes that followed the Mughal conquest of the Deccan (and their subsequent withdrawal from the region).This is an invaluable resource for all interested in the material and visual culture of South Asia and the wider Islamic world.

1114206196
The Visual World of Muslim India: The Art, Culture and Society of the Deccan in the Early Modern Era
Between the fourteenth and eighteenth centuries, the Deccan stood at the crossroads of far-reaching commercial and diplomatic networks, which ranged from Arabia and Iran to East Asia. Incresingly, these networks served as a conduit for European colonial expansion, and in the process the Deccan fell into the orbit of European interests. Its position and links to a wide variety of ultural influences produced in the Deccan an immensely rich visual culture. This was shaped further by the dynamic encounters between the different versions of Islam patronised by the ruling dynasties of the period, as well as by diverse local linguistic, religious and artistic traditions in the region. The Visual World of Muslim India is a richly illustrated and comprehensive exploration of the art of the late medieval and early modern Deccan. It explores the ways in which court art, artefacts and built environments were created and experienced, the reasons behind their creation, and the other agencies involved besides and beyond the court.Beginning with the idea of large spaces experienced by a range of subjects on a daily basis, this book continues with examples of architecture and architectural decoration that affirmed peculiar identities or beliefs, and finally considers some artefacts that played a role in court diplomacy as well as everydy life.
It therefore commences with an examination of the visual landscapes of the Deccan, including the magnificent Qutb Shahi capital of Golconda as well as smaller, less-known structures which constituted the 'city' in the early modern Deccan. There is also a focus on painting and painters, and their intersections with court policy and diplomacy, such as the earliest illustrated Dakani Urdu diwan- a collection of poems composed by a ruler of the Golconda kingsom. Muhammad- Quli Qutb Shah. The last section of the book leaves the boundaries of the courts and looks at the wider patterns of circulation of goods and ideas, highlighting the momentous social changes that followed the Mughal conquest of the Deccan (and their subsequent withdrawal from the region).This is an invaluable resource for all interested in the material and visual culture of South Asia and the wider Islamic world.

175.0 In Stock
The Visual World of Muslim India: The Art, Culture and Society of the Deccan in the Early Modern Era

The Visual World of Muslim India: The Art, Culture and Society of the Deccan in the Early Modern Era

by Laura E. Parodi
The Visual World of Muslim India: The Art, Culture and Society of the Deccan in the Early Modern Era

The Visual World of Muslim India: The Art, Culture and Society of the Deccan in the Early Modern Era

by Laura E. Parodi

Hardcover

$175.00 
  • SHIP THIS ITEM
    Qualifies for Free Shipping
  • PICK UP IN STORE
    Check Availability at Nearby Stores

Related collections and offers


Overview

Between the fourteenth and eighteenth centuries, the Deccan stood at the crossroads of far-reaching commercial and diplomatic networks, which ranged from Arabia and Iran to East Asia. Incresingly, these networks served as a conduit for European colonial expansion, and in the process the Deccan fell into the orbit of European interests. Its position and links to a wide variety of ultural influences produced in the Deccan an immensely rich visual culture. This was shaped further by the dynamic encounters between the different versions of Islam patronised by the ruling dynasties of the period, as well as by diverse local linguistic, religious and artistic traditions in the region. The Visual World of Muslim India is a richly illustrated and comprehensive exploration of the art of the late medieval and early modern Deccan. It explores the ways in which court art, artefacts and built environments were created and experienced, the reasons behind their creation, and the other agencies involved besides and beyond the court.Beginning with the idea of large spaces experienced by a range of subjects on a daily basis, this book continues with examples of architecture and architectural decoration that affirmed peculiar identities or beliefs, and finally considers some artefacts that played a role in court diplomacy as well as everydy life.
It therefore commences with an examination of the visual landscapes of the Deccan, including the magnificent Qutb Shahi capital of Golconda as well as smaller, less-known structures which constituted the 'city' in the early modern Deccan. There is also a focus on painting and painters, and their intersections with court policy and diplomacy, such as the earliest illustrated Dakani Urdu diwan- a collection of poems composed by a ruler of the Golconda kingsom. Muhammad- Quli Qutb Shah. The last section of the book leaves the boundaries of the courts and looks at the wider patterns of circulation of goods and ideas, highlighting the momentous social changes that followed the Mughal conquest of the Deccan (and their subsequent withdrawal from the region).This is an invaluable resource for all interested in the material and visual culture of South Asia and the wider Islamic world.


Product Details

ISBN-13: 9781848857469
Publisher: Bloomsbury Academic
Publication date: 05/27/2014
Series: Library of South Asian History and Culture
Pages: 400
Product dimensions: 9.60(w) x 7.70(h) x 1.40(d)

About the Author

Laura E. Parodi (Ph.D.) is an independent scholar based in Genoa, Italy. She has taught courses and seminars at the University of Oxford, University College Dublin, the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, and two Italian universities, and is the author of numerous essays on Mughal art and architecture, manuscript studies, and garden historiography.

Table of Contents

Foreword
Introduction: The Deccan as a Laboratory for the Study of Early Modern Visual Culture
PART I: EXPLORING URBAN LANDSCAPES FROM THE FUNCTIONAL TO THE SYMBOLIC
1. The Circular Cities of the Deccan
2. Golconda's Mosques and Tombs: Distribution, Chronology and Meaning
3. Recreating Islam in the Seventeenth-Century Deccan
PART II: PEOPLE'S BELIEFS IN THE MIRROR OF ARCHITECTURE AND THE ARTS
4. Sculpted Representations of Muslims and Bahmani Architectural Influence at Vijayanagara
5. The Great Mosque at Gulbarga Reinterpreted as the Hazar Sutun of Firuz Shah Bahmani
6. Deccani Guns: Features and Ornamentalism
7. The Fighting on the Wall: Animal Symbolism in the Deccan in a Eurasian Perspective
PART III: COURT ART POLIICIES: COSMOPOLITANISM, DIPLOMACY AND THE VISUAL
8. Variations on a Persian Theme: Persianate Painting at the Court of Golconda
9. A Dutch Artist in Biajapur
10. Vida de Jacques de Coutre: A Flemish Account of Bijapuri Visual Culture in the Shadow of Mughal Felicity
PART IV: BEYOND THE COURT: MARKET COMMODITIES AND POPULAR DEVOTION AS REFLECTED IN THE ARTS
11. East and West: The Deccan and the Outside World
12. Bidri Ware and the New Mughal Order
13. Gulshan-i 'Ishq: Illustrations of a Sufi Romance of the Deccan
14. Sacred Spaces and Objects of Popular Muslim Devotion, Practices and Festivals
Conclusion

From the B&N Reads Blog

Customer Reviews