The Queue (Abdel Aziz novel)

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OriginaltitleAl-Tabour
LanguageArabic
The Queue
First edition (Arabic)
AuthorBasma Abdel Aziz
Original titleAl-Tabour
TranslatorElisabeth Jaquette
LanguageArabic
GenreSatire; Absurdist fiction
Set inMiddle East
PublisherDar Al-Tanweer (Arabic); Melville House Publishing (English)
Publication date
2013
Publication placeEgypt
Published in English
24 May 2016
Pages224 (Kindle edition)

The Queue (Arabic: الطابور, romanized: Al-Tabuur) is a 2013 satire novel by Basma Abdel Aziz. It was first published in English in 2016. The novel explores totalitarianism and bureaucracy through the lens of a fictional Middle Eastern state and the people under its control.

In an unnamed Middle Eastern city, a building known as the Gate controls the populace by making decrees and requiring inordinate amounts of paperwork which must be directly processed by the Gate itself. Dr. Tarek examines a patient named Yehya, who was shot by government forces in a riot known as the Disgraceful Events. The Gate begins a propaganda campaign to rewrite the history of the Events, denying that anyone was shot at all. The Gate decrees that is illegal to remove a bullet without a permit. It also confiscates all X-Rays within the city, removing all evidence of government-sponsored violence. After the Events, the Gate remains closed. Thousands of people stand outside in the titular queue, awaiting the Gate's opening so that their paperwork can be correctly processed. Over the course of 140 days, Yehya's condition worsens and various other members of the queue struggle to survive as the Gate remains closed. Eventually, Tarek decides to break the law and remove the bullet without a permit, only to learn that Yehya has died of his injuries.

Themes

The Queue explores totalitarian society through the lens of fiction. The novel has been compared to works of absurdist literature and magical realism, which are often inspired by persecution. It explores the response to the Arab Spring by satirizing the government's dehumanization of its citizens, contrasting governmental power with grassroots dissenters. The novel also explores how history is written and distorted by the government propaganda to control citizens' reactions.[1] In Egypt, fake news, forged documents, and the intimidation of healthcare workers have been used as government tactics to exert control over the populace. All of these acts take place within the novel, which presents them with a straight-laced tone rather than as a caricature. [2] The Queue also explores how various social institutions interact to uphold power. In the novel, religious leaders work to uphold the power of the Gate by proclaiming that bullet wounds come from God. Those leaders also work to uphold corrupt corporations which increases government control through surveillance. Patriarchal social practice also serves to prevent female characters from dissenting.[3]

Style

According to a reviewer from NPR, The Queue echoes many other novels. It references the novel of the same name by Vladimir Sorokin, which parodies Russian bureaucracy. It also mirrors The Trial by Franz Kafka and Brave New World by Aldous Huxley in its portrayal of bureaucracy and governmental control. The novel has been categorized as "the newest in this genre of totalitarian absurdity".[4] The novel uses coded language, which gives the author a measure of cover to discuss real-life events in a way that might not otherwise be permitted.[5]

Background

Reception

References

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