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Journal of Literary Studies

versión On-line ISSN 1753-5387
versión impresa ISSN 0256-4718

Resumen

NABUTANYI, Edgar Fred. Dystopian Futures: Ugandan Science Fiction and Post-Apocalypse Contagions. JLS [online]. 2022, vol.38, n.1, pp.1-15. ISSN 1753-5387.  http://dx.doi.org/10.25159/1753-5387/10413.

Uganda, like most countries on the African continent, has in the recent past grappled with existential pandemics such as AIDS, Marburg disease, cholera, Ebola, and currently the Covid-19 pandemic. All the above-mentioned disease outbreaks have often unleashed unimaginable suffering on Uganda's population. This is perhaps why Ugandan scholars and public intellectuals- especially its writers such as Mary Karooro Okurut, Moses Isegawa, Jennifer Nansubuga Makumbi, and Austin Ejeit-have used fiction to offer insights into the various contours of these contagions. For example, in their interrogation of one of the worst pandemics to hit the Ugandan society-AIDS-a host of writers have centred a cautionary tale motif and verisimilitude to show how behavioural change can effectively combat disease outbreaks. This article builds on this substantial Ugandan archive of plague writing by focusing on one genre of Ugandan writing-science fiction-that has not received much critical attention for its exploration of pandemics. I explore how Dilman Dila's "A Leafy Man," "Where Rivers Go to Die" and "The Taking of Oleng" use science fiction tropes to proffer insights in contemporary Ugandan plagues. I argue that Dila uses science fiction to effectively delineate the causes of, how to cope with and the myths that circulate about these catastrophic occurrences in the Ugandan public sphere.

Palabras clave : Uganda; science fiction; Dilman Dila; AIDS; pandemics; science fiction tropes; public sphere.

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