Deconstructing the Traditional Apocalyptic Narrative in Etel Adnan’s Literary Texts
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University of Tlemcen
Abstract
The classical apocalyptic narrative has perennially kindled optimism within devout communities, yet the
conventions of this narrative fail to accommodate the intricacies of the postmodern epoch. Within this
framework, the present thesis undertakes an examination of Etel Adnan’s works: The Arab Apocalypse,
Master of the Eclipse and Other Stories, and There: In the Light and the Darkness of the Self and of the
Other, from a postmodern perspective. It delves into postmodern apocalypticism vis-à-vis existential crises
and historiographic metafiction. Central to this research are postmodern apocalyptic themes, including global
terrorism, existential dread, societal breakdown, authoritarian hegemony, and the subjugation of humanity.
Moreover, this analysis showcases the implementation of postmodern narrative strategies, such as an open
ending, nonlinear narratives and intertextuality, destabilizing the apocalyptic genre’s conventional paradigms.
This research employs a qualitative approach and analytical and critical methods to achieve these objectives.
Subsequently, the study results demonstrate that, in Etel Adnan’s case study, the themes and techniques of
postmodernism dismantle the established apocalyptic narrative by challenging its presuppositions
assumptions of order, linearity, harmony, and utopia. Besides, the results underscore the imperative role of
artistic expression and historiographic metafiction as potent rejoinders to the disquieting backdrop of the
postmodern era.