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The dhow as cultural icon: heritage and regional identity in the western Indian Ocean

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Dhows, the traditional sailing ships of the western Indian Ocean, are currently used in museums, heritage sites and popular culture as a symbol of a regional culture in the western Indian Ocean. While scholars have embraced the notion of seas as cultural or historical units, this type of 'basin thinking' is a recent phenomenon in the Indian Ocean. Over the last 150 years the dhow has gone from being a despised symbol of the slave trade and economic underdevelopment to representing a romanticized past and a regional identity. This article traces the parallel development of the idea of the dhow as a symbol of regional identity and changing perceptions of both the vessels and the region it is taken to represent. It argues that recent representations of dhows as cultural heritage represent a new and developing notion of regional identity within the western Indian Ocean.

Keywords: Indian Ocean; Muscat; Oman; Zanzibar; Zanzibar International Film Festival; dhow

Document Type: Research Article

Affiliations: Department of History, Arkansas State University, Jonesboro, Arkansas

Publication date: 01 January 2011

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