Spatial profanation of Lebanese sectarianism: Al-Nur square and the 17 October 2019 protests
Abstract
The ongoing 17 October 2019 Lebanese protests mark a critical
moment that historicises the struggle of a people, from different
sectarian and religious backgrounds, against political corruption.
Tripoli, a conservative Sunni-majority city in Northern Lebanon, has
caught the attention of researchers as its protests took the form of
a ‘rave party’ held in its main public square, known as al-Nur Square.
This article investigates the Tripolitan protests through the lens of
Agamben’s Profanations to highlight the dynamics of the al-Nur
Square protests that seem to conflate the religious and the political.
The article specifically argues that the protestors reconfigure the
space around the square in an attempt at profaning the sectarian
apparatus that takes the ‘Allah’ icon as its centre. In their spatial
attempt at profanation, however, the protestors seem to preserve
the religious intact, thus giving credibility to their de-sectarianising
act. Such an analytical reading of the protest sheds light on the
spatial dynamics inherent in any Lebanese attempt at reform,
including the 17 October 2019 protests. These protests become
historical records that trace the protestors’ continuous negotiation
of the religious and the political that embeds the attempt at desectarianisation within every demand they have for political
reform.
Volume
25Issue
2Collections
The following license files are associated with this item: