Imagining Afghanistan examines how Afghanistan
has been imagined in literary and visual texts that were published after the
9/11 attacks and the subsequent U.S.-led invasion—the era that propelled
Afghanistan into the center of global media visibility. Through an analysis of
fiction, graphic novels, memoirs, drama, and film, the book demonstrates that
writing and screening “Afghanistan” has become a conduit for understanding our
shared post-9/11 condition. “Afghanistan” serves as a lens through which
contemporary cultural producers contend with the moral ambiguities of twenty-first-century
humanitarianism, interpret the legacy of the Cold War, debate the role of the
U.S. in the rise of transnational terror, and grapple with the long-term impact
of war on both human and nonhuman ecologies.
Post-9/11 global Afghanistan literary production
remains largely NATO-centric insofar as it is marked by an uncritical
investment in humanitarianism as an approach to Third World suffering and in
anti-communism as an unquestioned premise. The book’s first half exposes how persisting
anti-socialist biases—including anti-statist bias—not only shaped recent literary
and visual texts on Afghanistan, resulting in a distorted portrayal of its
tragic history, but also informed these texts’ reception by critics. In the
book’s second half, the author examines cultural texts that challenge this
limited horizon and forge alternative ways of representing traumatic histories.
Captured by the author through the concepts of deep time, nonhuman witness, and
war as a multispecies ecology, these new aesthetics bring readers a
sophisticated portrait of Afghanistan as a rich multispecies habitat affected
in dramatic ways by decades of war but not annihilated.