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This book explores the impact of indigenous ideology and thought on everyday life in Northeast Africa. It shows that for millennia complex indigenous institutions have bound people together beyond the labels of Christianity and Islam; they have sustained peace through cultural exchange and tolerance, if not always complete acceptance.

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Produktbeschreibung
This book explores the impact of indigenous ideology and thought on everyday life in Northeast Africa. It shows that for millennia complex indigenous institutions have bound people together beyond the labels of Christianity and Islam; they have sustained peace through cultural exchange and tolerance, if not always complete acceptance.


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Autorenporträt
Sada Mire is an award-winning Swedish-Somali archaeologist with a PhD from UCL's Institute of Archaeology. She is founder and executive director of Horn Heritage Organisation, an archaeology and heritage research institution with offices in the Horn of Africa and The Netherlands. Mire was the founding director of Somaliland's Department of Archaeology until 2012 and since then has held academic positions at a several European universities including Leiden University. She has received a number of honours for her work, including being selected for lists such as New Scientist's "Most Inspiring Women in Science of All Times" in 2016 and The Hay Festival of Literature and Arts' list of 30 Global Thinkers and Writers. Mire's popular contributions as well as commissioned features on her work appear regularly in the international media, such as the BBC, The Guardian, CNN and Channel Four, UK. At the moment, she is working on a book on Somali Heritage and Identity Conflicts.

Rezensionen
Winner of the 2018-2021 Book Prize of the Society of Africanist Archaeologists for Best Monograph

"This is a confident, masterly piece of work by somebody uniquely qualified to carry out the relevant research... a remarkable and vivid book, which probably only Sada Mire (with her combination of theoretical proficiency in several academic disciplines and local intimacy) could have achieved. This is scholarly work, with a much wider general appeal". - Neal Ascherson, author of The King Incorporated

"Sada Mire grew up in the Horn of Africa and senses a continuity in sacred landscapes that cuts across space and time and the boundaries of states and religions. Her book provides a brave and bold conception of the regional system based on an almost forensic analysis of the evidence. Mire shows how the inclusion of material culture as evidence is central to understanding how continuities are created over time, but also how history can be masked at the same time as it is revealed. The argument is engrossing; chapter by chapter she builds up a convincing and absorbing argument for a discursive regional trajectory centred on the beauty and power of place curated over time by different faiths. The book illustrates the importance of location for symbolic action, knowledge and cultural memory, and the centrality of place as an entry point to understanding the deep past through an ongoing present. Underlying the history of the region is a syncretic trajectory, a multi-temporality, that is often challenged by fundamentalist positions but with an underlying structure that is centred on kinship deeply connected to a sacred landscape. As she concludes: 'From out of the womb of ancient indigenous and regional religions there has arisen a set of ideas reflected in practices, features and objects, all of which seem to connect the north and the west of the Horn of Africa with the south and the east.' The book is an exceptional study of cultural memory in place; a rich encounter with the deep history of symbolic action, emotion and aesthetic affect." - Professor Howard Morphy, Australia National University

"Dr. Sada Mire has done much to publicize the archaeology and heritage of the Horn of Africa, particularly Somaliland, and is an inspiration to a new generation of scholars, both inside Africa and elsewhere. This book is exciting in its interdisciplinary approach, vision, and scope in moving beyond the central sacred landscape case study, focusing on the Aw-Barkhadle shrine in Somaliland, to propose the far-reaching impact of an archaeologically attested Eastern Cushitic ritual complex with an emphasis on fertility." - Timothy Insoll, African Archaeology Review

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