Critical Forum Introduction: Cultural Encounters and Textual Speculations in the Mediterranean
Publication date
2024-03-18
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Abstract
This issue’s CRITICAL FORUM takes its point of departure from two paradigm shifts. The first one has already occurred in utopian studies, as attested by the increasingly evident interest in non-Western conceptions of utopianism and representations of speculative fiction. Scholars of utopian studies such as Lyman Tower Sargent and Jacqueline Dutton have been writing on utopias from other cultural traditions. The 2013 special issue of Utopian Studies (vol. 24, no. 1), which was introduced by Sargent and Dutton, included articles that reflected Iranian, Chinese, and Korean narratives and perspectives. During the first decade of the twenty-first century, monographs1 and journal special issues2 began examining literary and visual cultures of the Global South and transcultural expressions of the utopian imagination alongside a surge of speculative fiction from the Global South. A rising number of symposiums, anthologies, and critical works on Afrofuturism and Latinx and Arabic speculative fiction also contributed to today’s widening discussions.3 This special section in Utopian Studies advocates shifting from Western-centric approaches to more nuanced modes of interpretation with a specific focus on the Mediterranean, which has itself been a contested discursive site in Mediterranean studies, demanding the formation of new critical paradigms.
Keywords
Arabic speculative fiction, Dystopia, Mediterranean, Science fiction, Speculative fiction, Turkish speculative fiction, Utopia, Taverne, Philosophy, General Arts and Humanities
Citation
Kayışçı Akkoyun, B, Atasoy, E & Tabur, M 2024, 'Critical Forum Introduction : Cultural Encounters and Textual Speculations in the Mediterranean', Utopian studies, vol. 35, no. 1, pp. 127-131. https://doi.org/10.5325/utopianstudies.35.1.0127