Samira
She/her/hers
Room 218 Kresge Art Center
600 Auditorium Rd
East Lansing, MI 48824
FacultyArt, Art History, and Design
Assistant Professor
Art and Architectural History
Biography
Samira Fathi is a trained architect and architectural historian interested in urban history, modernization, and urban memory, with an emphasis on the intersection of architecture, representation of power, and spatial practices. She earned her Ph.D. in the history of art and architecture from the University of California Santa Barbara, in 2023, and received her MA in the history of Iranian architecture and BArch in architectural design from universities in Iran. Her research and teaching are primarily centered on the history of Islamic architecture and urbanism in the 18th and 19th centuries, with a geographic emphasis on Iran. She has also pursued the relationship between modernism and colonialism in her minor field of study on French colonial urbanism and modernism in the 19th century. Her first book “Residing in the Neighborhood: A Narrative of the Formation of Tehran’s Dowlat Neighborhood in the Naseri Era,” (in Persian; Matn, 2021) is an original investigation of Tehran’s quest for urban modernization in the mid-19th century and the emergence of an elite neighborhood in the city. Her doctoral dissertation examined another Iranian city, Isfahan, and its understudied urban transformations in the 18th and 19th centuries. Her research offers a new narrative of Isfahan’s revival by investigating urban processes, memory, and the materiality of the built environment reflected in literary sources (i.e., tazkira or biographic dictionary) and visual representations of the city. Her forthcoming book, grounded in her doctoral research, is titled Urban Memory and Architectural Patronage in Post-Safavid Isfahan.
Courses
HA 291: Introduction to Islamic Art and Architecture
HA 491: Architecture and Urbanism of the Early Modern Islamic World (16th to 19th centuries)
Publications
“From Vision to Reality: Tehran’s Urban Expansion Under Naser al-Din Shah (1848–96),” in International Journal of Islamic Architecture, Vol 12, Issue 1, Jan 2023, p. 71-99.
“Promenading in Isfahan’s Chaharbaghs,” in PLATFORM, (October 2021)
“A Gendered Response to a Watchful Gaze,” in react/review: a responsive journal for art & architecture, Vol. 3, fields of force: navigating power in space, place, and landscape, Spring 2023.