The gunpowder games: Traditional equestrianism as moroccan invented heritage tourism

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Abstract

Under King Hassan II's reign (1961-1999), the Moroccan state recognized the traditional equestrian display of tbourida or fantasia [1], as a symbol and sport of Morocco. Historically, the games once played a fundamental military, social, and communal role in the lives of Moroccans. Contemporarily, tbourida exhibitions are now organized competitions, or heritage displays at local festivals. The equestrian practice has even extended to sparingly include women riders and groups. By examining the emergence of tbourida as a performance of heritage, this research sheds light on advances in the conceptualization and development of a "cultural heritage tourism industry" within Morocco. The main driving research question is: How does tbourida as a case study fit into Morocco's national heritage tourism? Thus, this chapter explores the ways in which the tbourida evolved from cavalry charges and celebratory displays on local saint's days, or moussems, how the French usurped and absorbed these practices into the French colonial agenda, and how tbourida was rearticulated under the French colonial government (1912- 1956). It also considers tbourida in contemporary society of Morocco as a state-regulated heritage sport, emphasizing how the state creates a national and tourist identity around this performance.

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Talley, G. (2017). The gunpowder games: Traditional equestrianism as moroccan invented heritage tourism. In Equestrian Cultures in Global and Local Contexts (pp. 219–240). Springer International Publishing. https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-319-55886-8_12

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