Scivillage.com Casual Discussion Science Forum
This is the Muslim tradition of sci-fi and speculative fiction - Printable Version

+- Scivillage.com Casual Discussion Science Forum (https://www.scivillage.com)
+-- Forum: Culture (https://www.scivillage.com/forum-49.html)
+--- Forum: Film, Photography & Literature (https://www.scivillage.com/forum-59.html)
+--- Thread: This is the Muslim tradition of sci-fi and speculative fiction (/thread-3864.html)



This is the Muslim tradition of sci-fi and speculative fiction - C C - Jul 3, 2017

https://aeon.co/ideas/think-sci-fi-doesnt-belong-in-the-muslim-world-think-again

EXCERPT: Think invisible men, time travel, flying machines and journeys to other planets are the product of the European or ‘Western’ imagination? Open One Thousand and One Nights – a collection of folk tales compiled during the Islamic Golden Age, from the 8th to the 13th centuries CE – and you will find it stuffed full of these narratives, and more. Western readers often overlook the Muslim world’s speculative fiction. I use the term quite broadly, to capture any story that imagines the implications of real or imagined cultural or scientific advances. Some of the first forays into the genre were the utopias dreamt up during the cultural flowering of the Golden Age.

[...] As well as political philosophy, debates about the value of reason were a hallmark of Muslim writing at this time. The first Arabic novel, The Self-Taught Philosopher (Hayy ibn Yaqzan, literally Alive, Son of Awake), was composed by Ibn Tufail, a Muslim physician from 12th-century Spain. The plot is a kind of Arabic Robinson Crusoe, and can be read as a thought experiment in how a rational being might learn about the universe with no outside influence. [...] Many of the themes in the book – human nature, empiricism, the meaning of life, the role of the individual in society – echo the preoccupations of later Enlightenment-era philosophers, including John Locke and Immanuel Kant. We also have the Muslim world to thank for one of the first works of feminist science fiction....

MORE: https://aeon.co/ideas/think-sci-fi-doesnt-belong-in-the-muslim-world-think-again