![]() The 1948 Nakba and its aftereffects are fundamental to the various future visions these writers offer, from the technologically sophisticated scenarios of Emad El-Din Aysha’s “Digital Nation” and Ahmed Masoud’s “Application 39,” to the grim, apocalyptic imaginaries of Saleem Haddad’s “Song of the Birds” and Rawan Yaghi’s “Commonplace.” As Ghalayini explained, the Nakba shapes Palestine’s present and the past, and will continue to shape its future. ![]() Referencing the widely acknowledged aphorism that all great science fiction is about the present, Page described the anthology as a distillation of concerns and circumstances ongoing in Palestine. ![]()
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