Eternal Sleep: The Islamic Mausoleum's of China's Taklamakan Desert
LOS ANGELES REVIEW OF BOOKS
By Nick Holdstock
CHINA---There are mosques in towns all over China, but the most concentrated signs of Islamic belief are found in the western province of Xinjiang. The region is home to most of China’s Uyghurs, a Muslim people linguistically and culturally distinct from the Han Chinese (the ethnic majority in China). This is the setting for Lisa Ross’s "Living Shrines of Uyghur China", a book of photographs a decade in the making, whose subject is the shrines to folk saints (in Uyghur, mazar) found throughout the region. [link]
By Nick Holdstock
CHINA---There are mosques in towns all over China, but the most concentrated signs of Islamic belief are found in the western province of Xinjiang. The region is home to most of China’s Uyghurs, a Muslim people linguistically and culturally distinct from the Han Chinese (the ethnic majority in China). This is the setting for Lisa Ross’s "Living Shrines of Uyghur China", a book of photographs a decade in the making, whose subject is the shrines to folk saints (in Uyghur, mazar) found throughout the region. [link]
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