Imagining Afghanistan: Global Fiction and Film of the 9/11 Wars
ISBN: 9781612495811
Platform/Publisher: JSTOR / Purdue University Press
Digital rights: Users: unlimited; Printing: chapter; Download: chapter
Subjects: Political Science ; Sociology;

Imagining Afghanistan examines how Afghanistanhas been imagined in literary and visual texts that were published after the9/11 attacks and the subsequent U.S.-led invasion--the era that propelledAfghanistan into the center of global media visibility. Through an analysis offiction, graphic novels, memoirs, drama, and film, the book demonstrates thatwriting and screening "Afghanistan" has become a conduit for understanding ourshared post-9/11 condition. "Afghanistan" serves as a lens through whichcontemporary cultural producers contend with the moral ambiguities of twenty-first-centuryhumanitarianism, interpret the legacy of the Cold War, debate the role of theU.S. in the rise of transnational terror, and grapple with the long-term impactof war on both human and nonhuman ecologies.

Post-9/11 global Afghanistan literary productionremains largely NATO-centric insofar as it is marked by an uncriticalinvestment in humanitarianism as an approach to Third World suffering and inanti-communism as an unquestioned premise. The book's first half exposes how persistinganti-socialist biases--including anti-statist bias--not only shaped recent literaryand visual texts on Afghanistan, resulting in a distorted portrayal of itstragic history, but also informed these texts' reception by critics. In thebook's second half, the author examines cultural texts that challenge thislimited horizon and forge alternative ways of representing traumatic histories.Captured by the author through the concepts of deep time, nonhuman witness, andwar as a multispecies ecology, these new aesthetics bring readers asophisticated portrait of Afghanistan as a rich multispecies habitat affectedin dramatic ways by decades of war but not annihilated.


Alla Ivanchikova is anassociate professor of English and comparative literature at Hobart and WilliamSmith Colleges in Geneva, New York. Her research and teaching focus on thepost-9/11 global novel, post-socialist studies, and new media theory. Herrecent articles on the global novel and film appeared in TextualPractice, Camera Obscura, and Modern Fiction Studies.





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