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Commodifying Heritage: The Case of the Dubai Heritage Village Hillary Shusterman Professor Mona Damluji 9 December 2013

Commodifying Heritage: The Case of the Dubai Heritage Village

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Due to Dubai’s exponential growth as a global city, the United Arab Emirates (UAE) government has promoted it as a site of tourism, as a place to experience the past, present, and future. My paper examines how the development of the Dubai Heritage Village, a reconstruction of an old pearling village situated along the Arabian Gulf, attempts to recreate a built environment that captures the cultural and architectural heritage of the booming metropolis. The Heritage Village is considered one of the most ancient village locations in the Emirate of Dubai, with fortified buildings and houses which have been fully restored to resemble a ‘village style’. While the UAE government has supposedly reconstructed a “long-lost” history that has been misplaced in the fast-paced development of the city, I argue that these notions of heritage speak not to the local Dubayyan population, but instead to preconceived Orientalist notions that feed the Middle Eastern tourist industry. By equating heritage to a reconstruction of a seventeenth-century pearling village, Dubai’s past is constructed as separate from its present and future. Physically, the Heritage Village is situated along the Arabian Gulf, completely separate from the city, which is rapidly expanding eastward. Based on an analysis of photographs, architectural drawings, maps and tourism websites, my paper shows how the physical separation of the Heritage Village and the city only perpetuates the clear distinction between Dubai’s past and present. As the city continues to grow and develop, Dubai’s imagined “heritage” ultimately remains controlled and static within the vacuum of the Heritage Village.

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Commodifying Heritage: The Case of the Dubai Heritage VillageHillary ShustermanProfessor Mona Damluji9 December 2013

BACKGROUNDDubai today is described as one of the paradigms of architectural innovation, with a skyline that has established it as a powerful international entity. With its soaring glass towers and glitzy shopping malls, Dubais urban heritage has become a distant memory, an intangible idea that has been overshadowed by its exponential growth and modernization. While Dubais urban identity has been codified as a cityscape, its origins and history are quite disjointed. In the fifteenth century, the Portuguese, followed by the British, attempted to gain control over the area, which was then referred to as Historic Oman.[footnoteRef:1] The land was sought after for its potential commercial gain, for example, the availability of spices, which were valuable at the time for their use in the preservation of food.[footnoteRef:2] In addition, the locals generated the majority of their income from fishing and pearling, leading to economic prosperity that appealed to global entities. The area became a cultural melting pot of nomadic groups across the present Middle East, such as the Qawasim from Persia and the Bani Yas tribal group from the Najd area, what is now Saudi Arabia.[footnoteRef:3] Even when Dubai became an established emirate in 1820, the population was made of mostly migrating tribal groups who were attracted to the region due to trade.[footnoteRef:4] As a result, Dubais local population became the minority of the area. [1: Yasser Elsheshtawy, Dubai behind an Urban Spectacle (London; New York: Routledge, 2010), http://public.eblib.com/EBLPublic/PublicView.do?ptiID=446783.] [2: Ibid.] [3: Ibid.] [4: Ibid.]

In present-day Dubai, the population is approximately one million residents; while locals make up only about ten percent, the majority is comprised of Arab, Asian, and Western nationalities.[footnoteRef:5] Due to its disjointed formation and cultural makeup, Dubai itself, as well as its heritage, can be described as a hybrid. There is no single heritage that can be defined or drawn from Dubai; however, there has been a drive to extract a coherent record of architectural and cultural heritage from Dubai in the midst of its exponential growth and urban development. In the last two decades, Dubai has witnessed major urban growth generated from oil revenue, leading to a rapid industrialization.[footnoteRef:6] In the period following World War II, Dubai was maintained as a mercantile city, remaining more or less a British protectorate. With British assistance, a series of development projects were executed that solidified Dubais position as a center of trade.[footnoteRef:7] When commercial quantities of oil were discovered in 1966, cheap labor foreigners from India, Pakistan, and other countries began to inhabit the city.[footnoteRef:8] The new influx of revenue from the oil industry allowed for infrastructure development, providing the necessary environment for global corporations. [5: Ibid.] [6: Ibid.] [7: Ibid.] [8: Ibid.]

Today, Dubai has established itself as a cosmopolitan metropolis, becoming the cultural and industrial hub of the Gulf region.[footnoteRef:9] However, under the forces of an oil-based economy and the fast paced change, the UAE government is very keen on preserving, representing, and inventing a distinct national culture and heritage.[footnoteRef:10] The globalization and modernity of Dubai has threatened what the UAE government imagines to be authentic Emirati culture and heritage. These fears have been translated into the politicized government policy of heritage revival which is centered around museums, heritage villages/areas, the invention of cultural traditions, and the renovation of old buildings.[footnoteRef:11] While this need to establish a cohesive history to Dubai is rooted in a fear of loss of heritage, the UAE government preservation of a so-called Dubayyan identity has some apparent capitalistic undertones. In Dubais fast growing and developing environment, historic quarters have become an afterthought, and in the eyes of the UAE government, a lost tourist opportunity.[footnoteRef:12] Therefore, under the administration of the Department of Tourism, Commerce, and Marketing, these rebuilt sites of heritage are being resurrected not just to maintain some kind of lineage to Dubais past, but also to market itself to the outside tourist market. [9: Lucy Barnard, Cost of Living in Dubai Rising Rapidly | The National, accessed November 26, 2013, http://www.thenational.ae/business/industry-insights/economics/cost-of-living-in-dubai-rising-rapidly.] [10: Oliver James Picton, Usage of the Concept of Culture and Heritage in the United Arab Emirates: An Analysis of Sharjah Heritage Area, Journal of Heritage Tourism 5.1, no. 2010 (n.d.): 6984.] [11: Ibid.] [12: Rami Daher, Tourism in the Middle East: Continuity, Change, and Transformation (Multilingual Matters, 2007).]

Despite the desire to establish an all-encompassing heritage for Dubayyans, Dubai itself is very segmented. Referencing the map in Figure 1, while the inner city of Dubai has developed as a global city, the area close to the coast of the Arabian Gulf is historically where the local Dubayyans were situated, where most of their income is generated from fishing and pearl diving.[footnoteRef:13] The local population is confined to three small enclaves located at the mouth of the Creek, which mostly residential with extremely limited commercial space.[footnoteRef:14] The area west of the Creek is still undergoing a process of rapid expansion, which began in 1970. Dubbed as the new Dubai, this area is emerging as the new commercial and financial center of the city.[footnoteRef:15] As a result of this growth, the city is composed of an immigrant population, which, proportionate to the natives, is the highest in the world.[footnoteRef:16] Dubais population as a whole has become a conglomeration of people with a variety of different cultural backgrounds. Therefore, there has been a drive to find a balance between modernizing for a global audience, while being conscious of a heritage of a population that do not necessarily identify as Dubayyan.[footnoteRef:17] [13: Elsheshtawy, Dubai behind an Urban Spectacle.] [14: Ibid.] [15: Ibid.] [16: Ibid.] [17: Ibid.]

UAE government policies have been instituted promoting heritage revival, building museums, heritage villages, renovation of old buildings, and the extraction a sense of cultural tradition. In the last decade, Dubai has capitalized on its so-called heritage, using it to full advantage in the development of their tourism industry. By conserving these heritage areas to save what is left of Old Dubai, the government is essentially re-using them to become an important economic force for the city.[footnoteRef:18] [18: Mohamed Amin Mohamed, Heritage and Tourism: An Approach to Urban Conservation/Case Study of Dubai-UAE (King Saud University, 2004), http://faculty.ksu.edu.sa/hs/ArchCairo%202004%20Conference/mohamed%20amin%20%20hertige.pdf.]

In this pursuit to create a singular historical narrative of heritage for Dubai, the fact that Dubai has developed into a modern multi-ethnic city has been overlooked.[footnoteRef:19] Therefore, the creation of heritage sites such as the Dubai Heritage Village represent a supposed heritage that is not necessarily Dubayyan. Instead, it is a heritage that has been constructed, based off of a singularized historical narrative that is based on the notion of what tourists expect from a Middle Eastern historical site. The Dubai Heritage Village is a site that is made to appeal to a global audience rather than the Dubayyan population itself. [19: Picton, Usage of the Concept of Culture and Heritage in the United Arab Emirates: An Analysis of Sharjah Heritage Area.]

ANALYSISThe question that arises in regard to the construction of Dubais Heritage Village is whose heritage is represented, and for what audience is this supposed resurrection of the past speaking to. As previously addressed, the Village is an attempt by the UAE government to draw a cohesive narrative of architectural and cultural history from Dubai. According to the UAE, [the Heritage Village] is living testimony of the governments respect of Dubais past. Exhibitions in the Diving Village illuminate Dubais historical significance as a pearling nation while potters and weavers practice their traditional crafts at barasti stalls set up in the Heritage Village.[footnoteRef:20] However, the heritage that has been extracted and reconstructed through the Village is based off a singularized historical narrative, which is in direct contradiction to the hybridity of Dubais ethnic and cultural makeup and heritage. The separation of the Heritage Village from the central nucleus of the city mirrors the clear disconnect between the modern international city that Dubai has become and supposed heritage. The Heritage and Diving village is the physical manifestation through the build environment of the inner conflict Dubai is having between their desire to modernize for global audiences but also to be conscious of a heritage of a population that does not necessarily identify as Dubayyan. In turn, this Disneyfication of Dubais so-called heritage transforms it into a commodity, a commodity that the UAE views as a selling point for Dubai in the greater tourist industry. [20: Heritage Village | Sightseeing in Dubai | Discover Dubai, Emirates Taiwan, accessed December 7, 2013, http://www.emirates.com/tw/english/destinations_offers/discoverdubai/sightseeingindubai/heritageanddivingvillage.aspx.]

In the last few decades, the UAE government has launched Dubai into the tourism market, reconstructing real traditional quarters to cater to an increasing demand for an authentic Emirati cultural experience and nostalgia.[footnoteRef:21] However, the placement of the Heritage Village suggests an inner struggle in establishing a bridge between the old and the new what Dubai supposedly was and the booming metropolis it is today. The Village was constructed around old settlements of the local Dubayyan population located around the mouth of the Creek, where their income was predominantly fishing and pearl diving.[footnoteRef:22] Referencing the map in Figure 1, there is a clear separation between these quarters and the expanding city, which exists across the Creek to the west. This defining of the borders between Dubais past and present only furthers the notion that Dubais history must be compartmentalized and kept separate from the urban paradigm it has established itself as on the international stage. [21: Oliver James Picton, Usage of the Concept of Culture and Heritage in the United Arab Emirates: An Analysis of Sharjah Heritage Area, Journal of Heritage Tourism 5.1, no. 2010 (n.d.): 6984.] [22: Yasser Elsheshtawy, Dubai behind an Urban Spectacle (London; New York: Routledge, 2010), http://public.eblib.com/EBLPublic/PublicView.do?ptiID=446783.]

While the Dubai Heritage Village is claimed to be an accurate representation of Dubais cultural and historical heritage, when looking past the seemingly credible faade, its authenticity is put into question. The Dubai Heritage Village consists mostly of newly built structures that are designed to look like traditional Emirati constructions (Figure 2).[footnoteRef:23] While these mudbrick buildings claim to be constructed in order to simulate traditional Dubayyan architecture, they show signs of simulation.[footnoteRef:24] In reality, there is barely a clear record of what local Dubayyan houses and buildings actually looked like. According to Yassar Elsheshtawy, There is no detailed data as to the character of the houses in Dubai except that they were built out of clay and coral fragments.[footnoteRef:25] While the planners of the Heritage Village constructed the buildings out of the traditional materials, there was no clear record of the formula to create an authentic Dubayyan building. As a result, the Heritage Village, while it makes claims to authenticity, is actually the physical manifestation of an educated guess. Therefore, the notion of heritage claimed by the Dubai Heritage Village is not meant to speak to any sort of native population who could recognize the architecture as a tradition of their own, but instead offers the suggestion of Dubais culture and heritage. [23: Picton, Usage of the Concept of Culture and Heritage in the United Arab Emirates: An Analysis of Sharjah Heritage Area.] [24: Ibid.] [25: Elsheshtawy, Dubai behind an Urban Spectacle.]

Due to its isolated location and artificial upbringing, it is clear that the Dubai Heritage Village, while it has made claims to rekindling a sense of Dubais cultural history, it is constructed and organized to meet the needs and expectations of Dubais tourist industry. The Dubai Heritage Village is administered by the Department of Tourism, Commerce, and Marketing, which confirms that this site is not simply made for the purpose of nostalgia. By conserving areas considered to be heritage sites to save what is left of old Dubai, the UAE government can re-use them as an important economic force for the city by establishing it as a tourist destination.[footnoteRef:26] In its development as a global city, Dubai has delved into the tourism in order to obtain foreign currency, competing between other cities in the UAE for the tourist trade.[footnoteRef:27] The formal elements of the Heritage Villages built environment are also suggestive of its appropriation in the greater tourism industry of Dubai. The main entrances of the Heritage Village have been designated with both Arabic and English translations, both occupying equal space on the faade of the building (Figure 3). The equal allocation of space of both languages on the entrance suggests that in the construction of the Heritage Village, staff wanted to have the site appeal to global audiences, prioritizing it as a tourist destination rather than a historicizing landmark. [26: Picton, Usage of the Concept of Culture and Heritage in the United Arab Emirates: An Analysis of Sharjah Heritage Area.] [27: Ibid.; Mohamed Amin Mohamed, Heritage and Tourism: An Approach to Urban Conservation/Case Study of Dubai-UAE (King Saud University, 2004), http://faculty.ksu.edu.sa/hs/ArchCairo%202004%20Conference/mohamed%20amin%20%20hertige.pdf.]

Another factor that contributes to the artificialization of the Dubai Heritage Village is the staff. While there is Emirati involvement, a large number of decision-makers and staff are non-Emiratis, mostly from other Arab countries and also Western expatriates.[footnoteRef:28] This introduces complex geometries of power in the decisions being made. It is the non-Emirati staff that is reviving the Villages heritage through living displays, taking on the roles of village residents.[footnoteRef:29] The performances include dance, music, storytelling, cookery, crafts, and pearl diving, which has its own designated area (Figure 4) and skilled staff to take visitors on a less risky version of the expedition. Participants pay an additional fee to take a trip on a dhow and dive for pearls at a modified depth, accompanied by rescue boats (Figure 5).[footnoteRef:30] While these performances and exhibits are certainly popular among visitors, they are merely a faade of authentic Emirati culture. Although staff and national visitors at the Dubai Heritage Village certainly believe in an authentic past and an authentic Emirati culture, there is arguably no such thing as the authentic pastIt is a sense of nostalgia rather than a need to understand Emirati heritage that drives the Heritage Village.[footnoteRef:31] While initially this site was made for the purpose of reviving a cultural heritage that was swallowed up by the exponential industrialization of Dubai, it has been developed and transformed into a tourist attraction that suggests authenticity, but is in fact an artificial heritage. However valuable this rekindling of the past may be to the UAE, visitors to this site are not primarily looking for scientific historical evidence. Visitors to historic sites are looking for an experience, a new reality based on the tangible remains of the past. For them this the essence of the heritage experience.[footnoteRef:32] [28: Picton, Usage of the Concept of Culture and Heritage in the United Arab Emirates: An Analysis of Sharjah Heritage Area.] [29: Ibid.] [30: Oliver Robinson, Pearl Diving in Dubai - Around Town Features - TimeOutDubai.com, TimeOut Dubai, accessed December 7, 2013, http://www.timeoutdubai.com/aroundtown/features/32166-pearl-diving-in-dubai#.UqNcKY06JrR.] [31: Picton, Usage of the Concept of Culture and Heritage in the United Arab Emirates: An Analysis of Sharjah Heritage Area.] [32: Ibid.]

Although the creation of the Dubai Heritage Village was initially thought of as a way to preserve, represent, and invent a distinct culture and heritage, the site ultimately caters to an outside tourist market. While the commodification Dubais heritage is economically sound, the village rides a fine line between fact and fiction. Because of Dubais fragmented ethnic and historical makeup, the reconstructed buildings, performances, and exhibitions are making claims to heritage that instead of acknowledging Dubais historical progression as a city, create a timeless, artificial reality of its past. The staticicity of the Heritage Village plays into the notion of self-Orientalism, isolating its culture and heritage instead of creating a continuous historical narrative between what Dubai was and the booming metropolis it has become.

Images Referenced

Figure 1: Map of Dubai

Figure 2: Overview of mudbrick buildings, Dubai Heritage Village

Figure 3: Entrance to Heritage Village, Dubai Heritage Village

Figure 4: Entrance to Diving Village, Dubai Heritage Village

Figure 5: Dhow boat, Dubai Heritage Village

Works CitedDaher, Rami. Tourism in the Middle East: Continuity, Change, and Transformation. Multilingual Matters, 2007.Elsheshtawy, Yasser. Dubai behind an Urban Spectacle. London; New York: Routledge, 2010. http://public.eblib.com/EBLPublic/PublicView.do?ptiID=446783.Heritage Village | Sightseeing in Dubai | Discover Dubai. Emirates Taiwan. Accessed December 7, 2013. http://www.emirates.com/tw/english/destinations_offers/discoverdubai/sightseeingindubai/heritageanddivingvillage.aspx.Mohamed, Mohamed Amin. Heritage and Tourism: An Approach to Urban Conservation/Case Study of Dubai-UAE. King Saud University, 2004. http://faculty.ksu.edu.sa/hs/ArchCairo%202004%20Conference/mohamed%20amin%20%20hertige.pdf.Picton, Oliver James. Usage of the Concept of Culture and Heritage in the United Arab Emirates: An Analysis of Sharjah Heritage Area. Journal of Heritage Tourism 5.1, no. 2010 (n.d.): 6984.Robinson, Oliver. Pearl Diving in Dubai - Around Town Features - TimeOutDubai.com. TimeOut Dubai. Accessed December 7, 2013. http://www.timeoutdubai.com/aroundtown/features/32166-pearl-diving-in-dubai#.UqNcKY06JrR.