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- Title
Science Fiction and Social Criticism in Morocco of the 1970s: Muḥammad ‵Azīz Laḥbābī's The Elixir of Life.
- Authors
Campbell, Ian
- Abstract
This paper addresses the Moroccan science-fiction novel, 'Iksīr al- ayāt [The Elixir of Life, 1974] by Muḥammad ‵Azīz Laḥbābī from the perspective of the efficacy of sf's cognitive estrangement in providing a class-based and highly charged political critique in and of a repressive society with little or no class mobility. The novel depicts a Morocco fallen into chaos after the introduction of a (never-seen) immortality elixir. A young, impoverished medical student tries to obtain food in the wake of massive disruption caused by the poor's belief that the elixir will be reserved for the rich. His inability to leverage his educated status over his low birth provides a caustic critique of Moroccan society. The wrapping of this critique in two layers of displacement enables Laḥbābī to undertake this critique while remaining insulated from the very real consequences of making it directly.
- Subjects
MOROCCO; SCIENCE fiction; ELIXIR of Life, The (Book); ELIXIR of life in literature; ARABIC literature; SOCIAL criticism
- Publication
Science Fiction Studies, 2015, Vol 42, Issue 1, p42
- ISSN
0091-7729
- Publication type
Article
- DOI
10.5621/sciefictstud.42.1.0042