ARTICLE

ETHNOGRAPHIC STUDY ON PRESERVATION OF JAMIA MASJID RAWALPINDI

02 Pages : 11-17

http://dx.doi.org/10.31703/gasr.2019(II-I).02      10.31703/gasr.2019(II-I).02      Published : Dec 1

Ethnographic Study On Preservation Of Jamia Masjid Rawalpindi

    This paper is about preservation activities, especially the old mosque in Rawalpindi. Ethnography study has not been much of the focus point of academic research; the aim of the researcher was not only to promote visual ethnography but also preserve them in writing and photography the old Jamia Masjid of the Rawalpindi, for preservation programs are approaches to reproduction, restoration, maintenance, redevelopment, rehabilitation and consolidation. The study is descriptive in nature. The descriptive study refers to the way of studying contributors in a valid and precised manner. This study helps to an obliging contribution in anthropological literature. Scope of the study heritage and artefacts provide the basis for culture to have its own indigenous identity. The material artefacts need preservation which will educate the upcoming generation.

    Preservation, Conservation, Visual ethnography
    (1) Faiza Khatoon
    Student, Department of Anthropology, Pir Mehr Ali Shah Arid Agriculture University, Rawalpindi, Punjab, Pakistan.
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Cite this article

    CHICAGO : Khatoon, Faiza. 2019. "Ethnographic Study On Preservation Of Jamia Masjid Rawalpindi." Global Anthropological Studies Review, II (I): 11-17 doi: 10.31703/gasr.2019(II-I).02
    HARVARD : KHATOON, F. 2019. Ethnographic Study On Preservation Of Jamia Masjid Rawalpindi. Global Anthropological Studies Review, II, 11-17.
    MHRA : Khatoon, Faiza. 2019. "Ethnographic Study On Preservation Of Jamia Masjid Rawalpindi." Global Anthropological Studies Review, II: 11-17
    MLA : Khatoon, Faiza. "Ethnographic Study On Preservation Of Jamia Masjid Rawalpindi." Global Anthropological Studies Review, II.I (2019): 11-17 Print.
    OXFORD : Khatoon, Faiza (2019), "Ethnographic Study On Preservation Of Jamia Masjid Rawalpindi", Global Anthropological Studies Review, II (I), 11-17