1.

Record Nr.

UNINA9910794383803321

Autore

Barrie Thomas

Titolo

Architecture of the world's major religions : an essay on themes, differences, and similarities / / Thomas Barrie

Pubbl/distr/stampa

Leiden ; ; Boston : , : Brill, , [2020]

©2020

ISBN

90-04-44143-3

Descrizione fisica

1 online resource

Collana

Brill Research Perspectives

Disciplina

726

Soggetti

Religious architecture

Lingua di pubblicazione

Inglese

Formato

Materiale a stampa

Livello bibliografico

Monografia

Nota di bibliografia

Includes bibliographical references and index.

Nota di contenuto

Architecture of the World's Major Religions -- An Essay on Themes, Differences, and Similarities -- Thomas Barrie -- Abstract -- Keywords -- 1 Introduction -- 2 Approaches, Reconsiderations, and Contextual Themes and Typologies -- 3 Judaism -- 4 Christianity -- 5 Islam -- 6 Hinduism -- 7 Taoism -- 8 Buddhism -- 9 Coda -- Acknowledgements -- Cited Works.

Sommario/riassunto

In Architecture of the World's Major Religions: An Essay on Themes, Differences, and Similarities , Thomas Barrie presents and explains religious architecture in ways that challenge predominant presumptions regarding its aesthetic, formal, spatial, and scenographic elements. Two positions frame its narrative: religious architecture is an amalgam of aesthetic, social, political, cultural, economic, and doctrinal elements; and these elements are materialized in often very different ways in the world's principal religions. Central to the work's theoretical approaches is the communicative and discursive agency of religious architecture, and the multisensory and ritual spaces it provides to create and deliver content. Subsequently, mythical and scriptural foundations, and symbols of ecclesiastical and political power are of equal interest to formal organizations of thresholds, paths, courts, and centers, and celestial and geometric alignments. Moreover, it is equally concerned with the aesthetic, visual and material cultures and the transcendent realms they were designed to evoke, as it is with the kinesthetic, the dynamic and multisensory experience of place and the



tangible experiences of the body's interactions with architecture.