Archive | 2021

‘Globalizing the Local, Localizing the Global’: Writing Space in the Arab Gulf Region

 

Abstract


The United Arab Emirates (UAE) and Qatar are taking the lead in the urbanization boom\n that is drastically transforming the spatial fabric of the Arab Gulf region. Embedded\n in the ambitious urban development projects launched by the UAE and Qatar is an endeavour\n to ‘bring the world to the Arab Gulf region’. To this end, these two states are engaged\n in a process of collecting and borrowing antique objects and canonized artefacts,\n as well as reproducing and duplicating some internationally celebrated architectural\n sites and spaces. While some consider these projects to be ‘part of strategies to\n prepare for the post-oil era’, others hold that ‘Arab Gulf States aim to strengthen\n or … creatively (re)construct identitarian patterns’.\n 1\n It can be argued that Arab Gulf cities should be looked at as ‘political actors’\n due to ‘the functions they fulfill as spatial command posts for globalized capitalism’.\n 2\n The production and organization of social space, in this sense, cannot be seen as\n a ‘dead’ or passive category with no influence over various dimensions of lived experience,\n including thought, politics and economy. Juxtaposing the UAE’s and Qatar’s urbanization\n projects with the nineteenth-century phenomenon of world exhibitions and fairs, this\n article takes the Louvre Abu Dhabi and Villaggio Mall as case studies to investigate\n the modalities of knowledge generated through processes of cultural and spatial (re)production\n and the impact of the latter on the construction of personhood and lived experience\n in the Arab Gulf region.

Volume None
Pages None
DOI 10.14324/111.444.AMPS.2021V19I1.005
Language English
Journal None

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