
The Modern Arabic Fantastic
Alexandra Shraytekh(Author)
Edinburgh University Press
Will be published approx. on 31. July 2026
Book
Hardback
328 pages
978-1-3995-5603-3 (ISBN)
Description
The rich and lengthy Arabic corpus of fantastic fiction is one hidden in plain sight. In more broad studies of both fantastic fiction and Arabic literary and cultural history, it is notably absent. It is rarely, if ever, read as a corpus, much less as one with a rich, meandering, and turbulent history.
As fantastic modes have risen in global popularity over the past two decades, this book joins the revisionist wave of exciting critical interventions questioning the cornerstones of cultural history. It reads the current proliferation of Arabic fantastic stories as a potent return of the repressed and illuminates the persistence of premodern forms and narratives in contemporary cultural practice. Moreover, the book proposes essential categories, epistemes and historical timelines for effectively understanding the corpus of the modern Arabic fantastic, arguing that the fantastic is becoming a modern realism of our times.
As fantastic modes have risen in global popularity over the past two decades, this book joins the revisionist wave of exciting critical interventions questioning the cornerstones of cultural history. It reads the current proliferation of Arabic fantastic stories as a potent return of the repressed and illuminates the persistence of premodern forms and narratives in contemporary cultural practice. Moreover, the book proposes essential categories, epistemes and historical timelines for effectively understanding the corpus of the modern Arabic fantastic, arguing that the fantastic is becoming a modern realism of our times.
Reviews / Votes
This original and transformative book will become the necessary starting reference for Arabic literary scholars working on speculative fiction. I expect it will even inspire some contemporary Arab novelists who engage with criticism in English and want to better understand the roots and ramifications of their own literary practice. -- Margaret Litvin, Boston University Shraytekh provides a refreshing critique of the canons and taxonomies of modern Arabic literature - her method is an adroit mix of structuralist poetics, psychoanalysis and historicism. The book's use of genre, particularly the genres of gothic and the fantastic, to perform a set of contrapuntal readings will offer important new insights into the Arabic literary historical tradition. -- Samah Selim, Rutgers UniversityMore details
Series
Language
English
Place of publication
Edinburgh
United Kingdom
Target group
Professional and scholarly
Product notice
sewn/stitched
Cloth over boards
Dimensions
Height: 234 mm
Width: 156 mm
ISBN-13
978-1-3995-5603-3 (9781399556033)
Copyright in bibliographic data and cover images is held by Nielsen Book Services Limited or by the publishers or by their respective licensors: all rights reserved.
Schweitzer Classification
Person
Alexandra Shraytekh is Mellon-Bridge Assistant Professor of Arabic and International Literary and Visual Studies at Tufts University. Her academic publications include articles and book chapters on Gothic literature; magical realism; Arab-Jewish cinematic traditions; imaginaries of the nation. Her Arabic novels have been translated to English, French and German. She is a recipient of the Creative Capital Award (2022-2027) and was the Ellen von der Heyden Fellow at the American Academy in Berlin (2022).
Author
Mellon Bridge Assistant Professor of Arabic and International Literary and Cultural StudiesTufts University
Content
Preface: The Phantom Rider
Introduction - Literature of Doubt: Defining the Arabic Fantastic
Part 1: Theory
1. Marvels and Miracles: The Premodern Aesthetics of the Arabic Fantastic
2. The Arabic Fantastic, 2.0: A Theory of Reading
Part 2: History
3. Efendi Gothic, or: A Forgotten Prehistory of the Arabic Novel
4. The Arabic Fantastic as Planetary Fiction: The Poetics of Transmigration
Part 3: Reading
5. Horror for a Horrifying World: What the Arabic Fantastic Teaches Us About Reading
Conclusion - The Fantastic Art of Failure
Works Cited
Introduction - Literature of Doubt: Defining the Arabic Fantastic
Part 1: Theory
1. Marvels and Miracles: The Premodern Aesthetics of the Arabic Fantastic
2. The Arabic Fantastic, 2.0: A Theory of Reading
Part 2: History
3. Efendi Gothic, or: A Forgotten Prehistory of the Arabic Novel
4. The Arabic Fantastic as Planetary Fiction: The Poetics of Transmigration
Part 3: Reading
5. Horror for a Horrifying World: What the Arabic Fantastic Teaches Us About Reading
Conclusion - The Fantastic Art of Failure
Works Cited