686
Views
3
CrossRef citations to date
0
Altmetric
Articles

Hammams and the contemporary city: the case of Isfahan, Iran

&
Pages 138-156 | Received 22 Feb 2012, Accepted 01 Oct 2012, Published online: 13 Nov 2012

References

  • Afkhami, A., 1998. Disease and water supply: the case of cholera in 19th century Iran. In: J. Coppock and J. Miller, eds. Transformations of middle eastern natural environments: legacies and lessons. New Haven, CT: Yale University Bulletin Series No.103, 206–220.
  • Aksit, E. E. 2011. “The women’s quarters in the historical hammam.” Journal of Gender, Place and Culture 18(2): 277–293.
  • Water, leisure and culture Anderson S.C. Tabb B.H. Berg Oxford 2002
  • Assari, A., and T. M. Mahesh. 2011. “Demographic comparative in heritage texture of Isfahan City.” Journal of Geography and Regional Planning 4(8): 463–470.
  • Atassi, S. 2012. “The hammam in the mediterranean region: architectural, urban and social dimensions – a multidimensional approach.” In Hammam rehabilitation reader, edited by H. Dumreicher, R. S. Levine and M. Sibley-Behloul, 25–33. Austria: Sonderzahl.
  • Bakhtiar, A. 1974. “The royal bazaar of Isfahan.” Iranian Studies 7(1/2): 320–347.
  • Büyükdigan, I. 2003. “A critical look at the new functions of Ottoman baths.” Journal of Building and Environment 38(4): 617–633.
  • Çelik, Z. 1992. Displaying the orient: architecture of Islam at nineteenth-century world’s fairs. Berkeley, CA: California University Press.
  • Cichocki, N. 2005. “Continuity and change in Turkish bathing culture in Istanbul: the life story of the Çemberlitas hammam.” Turkish Studies 6(1): 93–112.
  • Destino, T., and M. Sibley. 2012. “The hammam living traditions – between tangible and intangible heritages.” In Hammam rehabilitation reader, edited by H. Dumreicher, R. S. Levine and M. Sibley-Behloul, 49–64. Austria: Sonderzahl.
  • Dumreicher, H. 2008. “The hammam: scenarios for a sustainable future.” In Cultural heritage and development in the Arab world, edited by F. Hassan, A. Trafford and M. Youssef, 229–242. Egypt: Bibliotheca Alexandrina.
  • Edensor, T. 2005. Industrial ruins: spaces, aesthetics and materiality. Oxford: Berg.
  • Ehlers, E., and W. Floor. 1993. “Urban change in Iran, 1920–1941.” Iranian Studies 26(3/4): 251–275.
  • El Kerdani, D. 2008. “Hammām folklore dynamics in Cairo: lessons from operation to regeneration.” International Journal of Architectural Research 2(3): 29–41.
  • Entekhab, 2011. Entekhab. Available from: www.entekhab.ir [Accessed August 2011].
  • Fadli, F., and M. Sibley. 2008. “The historic hammams of Cairo: safeguarding a vanishing heritage.” Journal of Architectural Conservation 14(3): 59–80.
  • Fazeli, N. 2006. Politics of culture in Iran: anthropology, politics and society in the twentieth century. London: Routledge.
  • Foran, J. 1992. “The long fall of the safavid dynasty: moving beyond the standard views.” International Journal of Middle East Studies 24(2): 281–304.
  • Gandy, M. 2004. “Water, modernity and the emancipatory city.” In Emancipatory urbanism, edited by L. Lees, 179–191. London: Sage.
  • Grigor, T. 2004. “Recultivating ‘good taste’: the early Pahlavi modernists and their society for national heritage.” Iranian Studies 37(1): 17–45.
  • Habashi, A. E. 2008. “Monuments of functioning buildings: legal protection over five case-study historic hammams in the mediterranean.” International Journal of Architectural Research 2(3): 42–55.
  • Kilito, A. 1992. “Architecture and the sacred: a season in the hammam.” Research in African Literatures 23(2): 203–208.
  • Kolb, B., and H. Dumreicher. 2008. “The hammam – a living cultural heritage.” International Journal of Architectural Research 2(3): 17–28.
  • The nature and function of water, baths, bathing and hygiene from antiquity through the renaissance Kosso C. Scott A. Brill Leiden 2009
  • Lambton, A. K. S., and J. Sourdel-Thomine. 2007. “Isfahan.” In Historic cities of the Islamic world, edited by C. E. Bosworth, 167–180. Leiden: Brill.
  • Leslie, J., 2001. New life for older structures: Isfahan and Yazd. Technical Review Summary [online]. Available from: http://www.akdn.org/architecture/pdf/2578_Ira.pdf [Accessed January 2012].
  • Lewis, B. 1997. The middle east: a brief history of the last 2,000 years. New York, NY: Simon & Schuster.
  • Lonely Planet. 2008. Iran. Victoria: Lonely Planet.
  • Matthee, R. 2009. “The Safavids under western eyes: seventeenth-century european travelers to Iran.” The Journal of early modern history 13(2): 137–171.
  • Mazumdar, S. 2000. “Autocratic control and urban design: the case of Tehran, Iran.” Journal of Urban Design 5(3): 317–338.
  • Mazumdar, S., and S. Mazumdar. 2004. “Religion and place attachment: a study of sacred places.” The Journal of Environmental Psychology 24(3): 385–397.
  • Moazami, B. 2008. “The ulema and the nationalization of religious morality in Iran, 1925–63.” Critical Middle Eastern Studies 17(1): 41–61.
  • Neyestani, J., and S. Amirhajloo. 2010. “The analysis of factors affecting the architecture of Isfahan bathes from Safavid to Qajar via SPSS.” International Journal of Humanities 17(1): 109–125.
  • Rohol Amini, M. 2007. Public bath within society, culture and literature in the past: attitudes and demographic research. Tehran: Ettelaat.
  • Sibley, M., 2006. The historic hammams of Damascus and Fez: lessons of sustainability and future developments. The 23rd Conference on Passive and Low Energy Architecture, Geneva, Switzerland, 6–8 September 2006 School of Architecture, University of Liverpool, UK.
  • Sibley, M. 2008. “Editorial: special issue on traditional public baths – hammāms in the Mediterranean.” International Journal of Architectural Research 2(3): 10–16.
  • Simon, A., 2007. Foucault au hammam: Le Panoptisme Chez les Romancières algériennes contemporaines. Contemporary French and Francophone Studies, 11 (3), 417–426.
  • Skounti, A. 2009. “The authentic illusion: Humanity’s intangible cultural heritage, the Moroccan experience.” In Intangible heritage, edited by L. Smith and N. Akagawa, 74–92. London: Routledge.
  • Smith, L., 2008. Heritage, gender and identity. In: B. Graham and P. Howard, eds. The Ashgate research companion to heritage and identity. Aldershot: Ashgate, 159–178.
  • Smolijaninovaitė, K., 2007. A study on historic hammams in Istanbul: changing aspects of cultural use and architecture. Unpublished Master Thesis. Brandenburg University of Technology.
  • Statistical Centre of Iran, 2012. Census 2011 [online]. Available from: http://www.amar.org.ie [Accessed September 2012].
  • Sterns, O., 2009. Sweating, scrubbing and socializing in Mideast’s historic hammams [online]. Available from: http://articles.cnn.com/2009-12-30/world/ [Accessed 30 December].
  • Stoler, A. L. 2008. “Imperial Debris: reflections on ruins and ruination.” Cultural Anthropology 23(2): 191–219.
  • Tabasi, M., and M. Ansari. 2007. “Study of the revival plan of Vazir hammam.” The Iranian journal of engineer message 37: 95–103.
  • Tabasi, M., et al. 2007. “Recognition of physical features of the Safavid period in Iran bath.” The journal of Beaus-Arts in Iran 29: 49–58.
  • Tagemouati, N.L., 2012. A business model for the management of a cultural hammam the case of hammam Seffarine in Fez. In: H. Dumreicher, R.S. Levine, and M. Sibley-Behloul, eds. Hammam rehabilitation reader. Austria: Sonderzahl, 123–134.
  • Vivier-Muresan, A.-S. 2007. “Communitarian neighborhoods and religious minorities in Iran: a comparative analysis.” Iranian Studies 40(5): 593–603.

Reprints and Corporate Permissions

Please note: Selecting permissions does not provide access to the full text of the article, please see our help page How do I view content?

To request a reprint or corporate permissions for this article, please click on the relevant link below:

Academic Permissions

Please note: Selecting permissions does not provide access to the full text of the article, please see our help page How do I view content?

Obtain permissions instantly via Rightslink by clicking on the button below:

If you are unable to obtain permissions via Rightslink, please complete and submit this Permissions form. For more information, please visit our Permissions help page.