Nizwa Fort: Transforming Ibadi Religion through Heritage Discourse in Oman

Type de ressource
Auteur/contributeur
Titre
Nizwa Fort: Transforming Ibadi Religion through Heritage Discourse in Oman
Résumé
Since becoming a nation-state in 1970, Oman's expanding heritage industry has included the restoration of castles and citadels, including the fort at Nizwa. The fort was once the administrative and juridical center of the Ibadi Imamate (1913–58). As the site of sharia adjudication, it sanctioned a past of primarily moral nature, oriented toward God and salvation and grounded in Ibadi doctrine and practice. This mode of history implied that everyday interactions and relationships could be assessed through exemplary forms of morality, as embodied by virtuous forbears. Yet the heritage project in modern Oman has treated history and Islam as seemingly separate, erasing formal awareness of the sociopolitical and ethical relationships that once characterized Ibadi rule. Today, the historical work done by the fort as a heritage site entails a progress-oriented future, reconfiguring Ibadi Islam in the process.
Publication
Comparative Studies of South Asia, Africa and the Middle East
Maison d’édition
Duke University Press
Lieu
Durham
Date
2019
Volume
39
Numéro
2
Pages
328-343
Clé de citation
sachedinaNizwaFortTransforming2019
ISSN
1548-226X
Langue
eng
Référence
Sachedina, A. (2019). Nizwa Fort: Transforming Ibadi Religion through Heritage Discourse in Oman. Comparative Studies of South Asia, Africa and the Middle East, 39(2), 328‑343.