The Architecture of the Hijab is a philosophical and design-centered exploration of modesty as spatial intelligence rather than cultural symbol or religious shorthand.
Moving beyond debates of visibility and identity, this book approaches the hijab as an architectural structure - one that organizes space, regulates distance, and reshapes how the body is allowed to appear within modern visual systems.
Drawing from critical theory, design logic, and fashion history, the work examines how contemporary fashion operates through an unspoken grammar of exposure, speed, and instant legibility - and how modest form disrupts that grammar by introducing volume, restraint, temporality, and controlled access.
Structured as a network rather than a linear argument, the book invites readers to move between conceptual nodes, theoretical propositions, and material consequences. It does not offer trends or prescriptions, but a language - a way of thinking form as ethics, and garments as spatial devices.
The Architecture of the Hijab speaks to designers, thinkers, architects, and readers interested in fashion criticism, visual culture, and the politics of form. It positions modesty not as limitation, but as an advanced design intelligence capable of reconfiguring power, gaze, and presence in contemporary space.