All Stories

  1. Dis-Placed: Space, Settlement, and Agency
  2. Cities and Islamisms
  3. Space in representation
  4. Appropriating the Masculine Sacred
  5. New Islamist Architecture and Urbanism
  6. Introduction
  7. Building (the) national
  8. Epilogue
  9. Encountering the Urban Crisis: The Gezi Event and the Politics of Urban Design
  10. Architectural mimicry and the politics of mosque building: negotiating Islam and Nation in Turkey
  11. Gazes in dispute: visual representations of the built environment in Ankara postcards
  12. Turkey: Modern Architectures in History: Sibel Bozdoğan and Esra Akcan Reaktion Books, 2012 344 pages, illustrated $25.89 (paperback)
  13. Critique by design: Tackling urban renewal in the design studio
  14. City profile: Ankara
  15. Political Encampment and the Architecture of Public Space:TEKEL Resistance in Ankara
  16. Minarets without Mosques: Limits to the Urban Politics of Neo-liberal Islamism
  17. “Early Republican Ankara”
  18. The shape of the nation: Visual production of nationalism through maps in Turkey
  19. The Image of Urban Politics: Turkish Urban Professionals and Urban Representation as a Site of Struggle
  20. Organic Intellectuals of Urban Politics? Turkish Urban Professionals as Political Agents, 1960—80
  21. Identity, Monumentality, Security
  22. Imagination as Appropriation