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Dismantling Baathist Iraq : foreign occupation and cultural destruction

conference contribution
posted on 2012-01-01, 00:00 authored by Benjamin IsakhanBenjamin Isakhan
This paper examines the systematic efforts to dismantle or destroy the symbolic dimension of the Baathist regime in Iraq since 2003. It argues that while the Baath were undeniably cruel and oppressive, they did undertake one of the twentieth century’s most robust attempts to utilise the political power of historical memory to create a unified Iraqi national identity. However, while many have examined the militaristic or bureaucratic dimensions of de-Baathification, no such attempts have been made to examine the destruction of the symbols and monuments of the Baathist state and the consequences it has had for Iraqi national identity. This paper addresses this paucity and concludes that with the symbolic destruction of the Baathist state has come a near complete erosion of the Iraqi brand of nationalism that the Baath had managed to promulgate to varying degrees of success since the late 1960s.

History

Event

Historical Justice and Memory. Conference (2012 : Melbourne, Vic.)

Publisher

[The Conference]

Location

Melbourne, Vic.

Place of publication

Melbourne, Vic

Start date

2012-02-14

End date

2012-02-17

Language

eng

Publication classification

E2 Full written paper - non-refereed / Abstract reviewed

Editor/Contributor(s)

K Neumann

Title of proceedings

Proceedings of the Historical Justice and Memory Conference

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