Fantasia colonial and postcolonial: Ritual practice in the works of Assia Djebar and Fouad Laroui
Fouad Laroui's novel "La vie, l'honneur, la fantasia" (2025) reconstructs a childhood experience from the perspective of an adult first-person narrator: the ritualized murder of Arsalom during the Moroccan equestrian ceremony of the Fantasia. This execution appears as a collective act of restoring honor against a modernity imagined as corrupt, in which Arsalom, with his "arrogant mobility" and economic greed, becomes the enemy. The Fantasia thus becomes a social matrix in which power, concealment, and ritual violence intertwine; the precision of the mounted shooting ritual—"a single detonation among fifteen others"—marks the symbolic unity of the "corps collectif" and simultaneously exposes the dysfunction of state institutions, which are unable to dismantle corruption and informal codes of honor. In contrast, Assia Djebar's "L'amour, la fantasia" (1985) opens up Algeria's colonial archive poetically and polyphonically: the fantasia becomes an ambivalent symbol of both male power demonstrations, female vulnerability, and literary remembrance against colonial historical politics. Where Djebar employs fragmented polyphony to reactivate a repressed past, Laroui works with analytical linearity to make visible contemporary entanglements of honor, economics, and institution. This review emphasizes this complementary tension: Djebar creates a counter-archive of voices; Laroui dissects the present and shows how ritualized violence extends into modern legal logics. Together, these two narratives present the fantasia as an interface between history and the present, where continuities of colonial violence and their postcolonial transformations can be exemplified.
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