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Sab ‘at Abwāb: A renewed commitment to life
Abstract
Contemporary Moroccan social and political realities have become an important field of postcolonial inquiry. In this paper I critically review the experience of political prison writing published in the 1960s, with a focus on the work of ʻAbd al-Karīm Ghallāb, Sab ‘at Abwāb (1965) [Seven Doors]. I also explore his relation to other Moroccan writers’ prison writing. This novel testifies to the author’s life and prison experience in the post-independence Moroccan prison and entails a debate associated with political imprisonment, a rethinking of the effect of incarceration and a reflection and a reevaluation of how this process has informed the project of nation-building. I argue that prison writing has become more foregrounded in Moroccan contemporary novels, whereby authors reevaluate their experience in a socially, economically, culturally and politically changing nation. I discuss how the experience of Ghallab’s political incarceration and his representation of the Moroccan intellectual struggle for cultural and political agency provides a point of reference for understanding the Moroccan activism of 1960s and the transition to what later came to be known as the ‘years of lead.’
Discipline
Literature
Geographic Area
Morocco
Sub Area
Maghreb Studies