Zena Kamash
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Cultural heritage destruction in Syria and Iraq
Narratives and nuance
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This chapter introduces the three major case studies in the book – Aleppo, Mosul and Tadmor-Palmyra – and examines the narratives we have created about destruction relating to these places, both in the deeper past and the present. I show that some of our narratives around destruction and change in the past relating to Aleppo and Mosul often do not take full account of the impact these would have had on those living with those changes. Instead, we seem to hide those impacts behind an emphasis on continuity and longevity. In the case of Tadmor-Palmyra, however, we see a rather different situation where the trope of destruction seems to have stuck to the city, even when the archaeological evidence seems to point to other kinds of change. In the accounts of what happened to Mosul, Aleppo and Tadmor-Palmyra from 2011 onwards, I tease out the different trajectories of the conflicts in these places and the modes and motivations for cultural heritage destruction. These add nuance to the kinds of ‘bad guys v good guys’ narratives that we often see in the media and instead show the complexity of what happened to the people and cultural heritage of these places.

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