
Contents
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Memory Mobilization in Literature Memory Mobilization in Literature
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The Turn to History and Memory of Oppression and Protest after the 2011 Arab Uprisings The Turn to History and Memory of Oppression and Protest after the 2011 Arab Uprisings
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Dar Al Mulk (House of Dominion or Royal House and Entourage) Dar Al Mulk (House of Dominion or Royal House and Entourage)
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Conclusion Conclusion
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11 Mobilizing the History of Protest and Dissent in Post-2011 Moroccan Novels
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Published:November 2023
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Abstract
Literary and cultural production have always engaged with pressing social and political issues and have offered alternative visions and ‘imagining’ to the social and political spheres in Morocco. Novels written in Arabic and French, for example, have offered a rich cultural memory of social and political mobilization. They individually and collectively function to keep alive a memory of protest and riots that have largely been silenced in official history. This chapter focuses on the turn to memory in a sample of novels written post-2011 Arab Uprisings. It argues that these novels’ focus on memories of rural rebellions, urban riots, and students’ protests reinforces the interplay between past and present histories of dissent (and their suppression) as a reminder of the continuity of revolutionary movements of change. The novels demand the reader to reflect on Morocco’s political past, but also consider what sort of present is now available and what possible futures might be embraced.
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