7.4 Not Prophecy but Inversion: Omar El Akkad and Min Hyoung Song
Manage episode 419936680 series 3460205
Omar El Akkad joins critic Min Hyoung Song for a gripping conversation that interrogates fiction’s relationship to the real. Before he became a novelist, Omar was a journalist, and his experiencing reporting on (among other subjects) the war on terror, the Arab Spring, and the Black Lives Matter movement profoundly shapes his fiction. His first novel, American War (Vintage, 2018), follows the protagonist’s radicalization against the backdrop of afossil fuel-motivated civil war. His second, What Strange Paradise (Vintage, 2022), is a haunting retelling of Peter Pan focused on a young Syrian refugee. But as Omar and Min’s dialogue reveals, literary criticism doesn’t always get the politics of political fiction right. Their conversation moves from the preoccupation with “literal prophecy” which plagues the reception of speculative fiction in general and climate fiction in particular to the multifaceted appeal of the fantastical in writing migration stories. They discuss Omar’s interest not in extrapolation, but in inversion. And they take up the imaginative challenges posed by climate change: the way it fails to fit zero-sum colonial ideologies; the way it relies upon the continued development of “the muscle of forgetting, the muscle of looking away.” Finally, Omar’s answer to the signature question is a case study in the inversion that characterizes his work: Little Women readers, prepare yourselves!
Mentioned in This Episode
- Paolo Bacigalupi
- Kim Stanley Robinson
- Barbara Kingsolver
- Jenny Offill
- Richard Powers, The Overstory
- Amitav Ghosh, The Great Derangement
- Barack Obama, “A New Beginning: Remarks by the President at Cairo University, 6-04-09”
- Stephen Markley, The Deluge
- Alan Kurdi (photographed by Nilüfer Demir)
- Mohsin Hamid, Exit West
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