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Journal article

Novelising the Arab revolutions: The Knights of Assassinated Dreams

English
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2015
Taylor & Francis Group
Africa | Northern Africa

In this paper, I examine the quest for freedom in Ibrahim Al-Koni's novel The Knights of Assassinated Dreams. I argue that the novel introduces freedom as the main catalyst of the Arab revolutions that have swept the Middle East and North Africa since Mohamed Bouazizi's self-immolation in December 2010. Through the study of the actions of the main characters in this novel, I illustrate how freedom is achieved in the midst of war and disorder during the Libyan Revolution-turned-civil-war. Moreover, I engage the question of the novelisation of the revolution and how The Knights of Assassinated Dreams is a fresh contribution to the ongoing debate about novelisation and aesthetisation of current events. aha ussein was probably the first Arab literary critic to have discussed the relationship between literature and the revolution as early as 1954. ussein was writing in the aftermath of the Egyptian revolution and his opinion has come to shape the discussion of the literary depiction...

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