The production of history is premised on the selective erasure of
certain pasts and the artifacts that stand witness to them. From the
elision of archival documents to the demolition of sacred and secular
spaces, each act of destruction is also an act of state building.
Following the 1991 Gulf War, political elites in Saudi Arabia pursued
these dual projects of historical commemoration and state formation with
greater fervor to enforce their postwar vision for state, nation, and
economy. Seeing Islamist movements as the leading threat to state power,
they sought to de-center religion from educational, cultural, and
spatial policies.
With this book, Rosie Bsheer explores the increasing secularization of
the postwar Saudi state and how it manifested in assembling a national
archive and reordering urban space in Riyadh and Mecca. The elites'
project was rife with ironies: in Riyadh, they employed world-renowned
experts to fashion an imagined history, while at the same time in Mecca
they were overseeing the obliteration of a thousand-year-old topography
and its replacement with commercial megaprojects. Archive Wars shows
how the Saudi state's response to the challenges of the Gulf War served
to historicize a national space, territorialize a national history, and
ultimately refract both through new modes of capital accumulation.