Islamic Art - The Barakat Trust podcast

S6E4: Renewal in West Africa: The Great Mosque of Djenné with Michelle Apotsos

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This month’s podcast takes us to the far south-west of the Islamic world, to the Inner Nigel Delta in Mali where stands the Great Mosque of Djenné in all its magnificence. Join Michelle Apotsos as she discusses the story of this vibrant place of worship built solely out of mud and wood at the centre of a town with deep historical links south to the Atlantic coast and north across the Sahara desert to the Maghreb. In the annual tradition of renovation and reconstruction, the Great Mosque offers a model of architectural renewal alongside an understanding of heritage not as a stagnant object needing to be frozen time but a living tradition.

Michelle Apotsos is a Professor of Art and Architectural History at Williams College, specializing in architecture and Afro-Islamic creative production. Her current projects focus on the growth of large-scale congregational masajid on the continent and alternative contemporary religious spatial technologies and ecologies.

This episode is part of our series Peripheries which seeks to push our understanding of the cultural heritage of the Islamic world away from the traditional centres that we associate with it. With a fantastic range of guests we will examine places and topics often considered peripheral to the Islamic world and understand why they are in fact of central importance to the region’s cultural heritage, from Armenia to England, from Ethiopia to West Africa.

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