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E-raamat: Speculative Route: Futures from South and Southwest Asia and North Africa [Taylor & Francis e-raamat]

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The Speculative Route explores speculative traditions and science fictional modes across South and Southwest Asia and North Africa (SSWANA), examining their historical connections, inter and intra-regional entanglements, overlaps, and differences.



The Speculative Route explores speculative traditions and science fictional modes across South and Southwest Asia and North Africa (SSWANA), examining their historical connections, inter and intra-regional entanglements, overlaps, and differences. Conceptualizing science fiction and fantasy (SFF) as a mode rather than genre, this volume challenges the putative boundaries between literary and genre fiction through critical studies and essays focusing on SFF from Bangladesh, Egypt, India, Iran, Pakistan, Palestine, Sri Lanka, and Turkey. It demonstrates the ways in which science fictional modes of thinking and imagination function as critical tools for addressing social, cultural, and political issues beyond genre conventions and expectations. Bringing together articles by leading scholars of SFF and think-pieces by acclaimed authors of contemporary SF, this volume focuses on central themes such as the relationship between aesthetics and politics, alterity, worldbuilding, memory, trauma, colonialism and decolonization, ecology, gender, religion, and mythopoetics. It engages with the past, present, and future of speculative traditions in SSWANA, and compares the visions that emerge from these seemingly disparate––but historically connected––entities.
Part of the Studies in Global Genre Fiction series, this volume will be of great interest to academics, students, and practitioners in the fields of genre studies (notably, SF, SFF), comparative literature, media and popular culture, area studies, postcolonial studies, and future studies, as well as to readers who are interested in exploring SFF works from the Global South.

List of contributors
Series Editors Preface
Introduction: The Spice Must Flow
Merve Tabur and Sami Ahmad Khan
I Critical essays
I.I Future Pasts
1 Suparno Banerjee, Science Fictionalizing the Epic: Retelling the Ramayana
in the Age of Science
2 Engin Klç, Khent (The Fool): An Armenian Utopian Vision Compared to
Ottoman-Turkish Utopias
3 Ada Barbaro, Other Places, Upside-down Places: Narrating the Nakba (1948)
from the Future, Palestine Looks to the Future to Contest the Present
I.II Urban Futures
4 Nat Muller, Maha Maamouns 2026: Cracks in the Future of the Global City
5 Ezgi Hamzaçebi, Istanbuls Speculative Futures: Transformation of the City
and the Sense of Citizenship
6 Saba Pirzadeh, Environmental Futurities and Solastalgia in Global
Speculative Fiction
I.III Rethinking Gendered Presents
7 Tehmina Pirzada, Beyond Capes and Khans: Social Retrofuturism in Select
Female Superhero Narratives
8 Zahra Jannessari Ladani, Utopian Mentalities and the Dystopian Future in
Zoha Kazemis Humanoid
9 Sabiha Huq, Bangla Science Fiction: A Gendered Landscape
II THINK PIECES
10 Sonia Sulaiman, The Reality and the Dream: The Palestinian Speculative
11 Funda Özlem eran, The Tech-Ignorants Guide to Science Fiction
12 Ahmed Naji, On Egyptian SFF
13 Zoha Kazemi, Keeping it Close to Home: A Think-piece about the New
Iranian Speculative Fiction Movement
14 Manjula Padmanabhan, Space, Time and Otherness
15 Navin Weeraratne, Writing Sri Lankan Science Fiction
16 Samit Basu, On Indian SFF
17 Usman T. Malik, An Ode to The Music in Our Bone Marrow: Revisiting
Pakistani and South Asian Science Fiction
18 Yudhanjaya Wijeratne, Infinite Games in Someone Elses Sandbox
19 Priya Sarukkai Chabria, The Same Life in My Blood
20 Saad Z. Hossain, South Asian World Building in Science Fiction and
Fantasy
21 A Roundtable of SSWANA Writers: The Speculative South
Index
Merve Tabur is lecturer in Comparative Literature at Utrecht University and researcher at CoFutures. Sami Ahmad Khan is a writer, academic, and documentary producer. He teaches at Jawaharlal Nehru University, India.