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Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: http://hdl.handle.net/11375/14404
Title: Architecture in a Quiet Revolution
Authors: Khaled, Dania N.
Keywords: Architecture;Art;Education;Women's Rights;Qatar;Arab;Middle East;Islam;Economical Growth;Qatari Tradition;Culture;Identity;Architectural History and Criticism;Bilingual, Multilingual, and Multicultural Education;Interior Architecture;Landscape Architecture;Modern Art and Architecture;Other Religion;Women's Studies;Architectural History and Criticism
Publication Date: Jul-2010
Abstract: <p>This paper demonstrates the examination of change in a country. The main element used to measure that change is architecture. The form, development, quality and quantity of the architecture displays the country's change and shows us how it begins to effect many aspects in the country.</p> <p>Qatar is the main case study in this paper, as it is growing rapidly and is exploding with new construction everywhere. Qatar is a young country that gained independence in 1850 and is known to be proud of its culture, religion, and traditions. These elements are what gave Qatar, and the Gulf region, a unique identity and these elements are what unite its people. Culture in the Arab world is portrayed through behavior, fashion, dialect, interior and exterior design. In the past, everything in Qatar, from peoples’ lifestyles and fashion to their buildings and homes, reflects who Qataris are as a people, and reflects their country. Identity is a series of characteristics, extracted from culture, that make someone or something unique enough to distinguish them from others; these characteristics are depicted in history, buildings are architecture, and in peoples’ lifestyles and clothing. Recently, all these aspects have been gradually changing to give Qatar a more recognized and respected international status. The West recognizes in Qatar an aspect of familiarity that is depicted in the country’s style in architecture, homes and fashion. I have personally witnessed this change over the past fifteen years in Qatar.</p>
URI: http://hdl.handle.net/11375/14404
Identifier: cmst_grad_research/4
1003
1558725
Appears in Collections:Major Research Projects (MA in Communication and New Media)

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