Shaping Dystopian Visions in Orwell’s 1984 and Laredj’s 2084: The Tale of the Last Arab
Loading...
Date
Authors
Journal Title
Journal ISSN
Volume Title
Publisher
Abstract
Speculative fiction has appeared deliberately. Its execution oscillates between fantasy,
science fiction, or utopia/dystopia dyads, but its influence is hitherto salutary partly because
it expands the horizons of culture, it is at the helm of traveling by probable roads and
constantly worries itself about the future, partly also because it has the power to carry a
literary work to universality with regards to the laws and lore of identity and aesthetics. The
question organizing this project concerns the extent to which Orwell and Laredj were
derivative from authors, works of literature, history, politics, and media to amplify the
underrepresented voices in a totalitarian discourse. Thus, this research attempts to examine
two pieces of literature that are more concerned with the future than any other. Orwell’s
Nineteen Eighty-Four and Laredj’s 2084: The Tale of the Last Arab are analyzed and
compared to highlight not only similarities and differences but also to regard the sci-fi genre
from another angle that stands at the periphery in the presence of Western production. It finds
that the powerful imagery of Orwell’s text still impacts literature that is concerned with the
vision of the future. However, the comparison also reveals that Orwell and Laredj were not
concerned with expressing adventures and exaggeration for entertainment as much as
chronicling the future in a bitter disclosure to warn from totalitarianism and ideological
domination. This research also invites readers and researchers to act and react to the turn of
comparatists towards Cultural Studies, Woman’s Studies, Semiotics, Nationalism, and
Postcolonial theory to deconstruct the Western hierarchy in comparative literature.
