世界・海外・国外の文学賞

← 受賞作品一覧に戻る
This Blinding Absence of Light

国際ダブリン文学賞

This Blinding Absence of Light

タハール・ベン=ジェルーン

モロッコの刑務所に収容された政治囚たちの極限状態を、暗闇と記憶のモチーフで描く長篇。拷問や沈黙、信仰と希望の関係を鋭く描写し、人間の尊厳と崩壊を問う詩的で重厚な作品だ。

監獄拷問政治抑圧記憶人間の尊厳

作品情報

モロッコの刑務所に収容された政治囚たちの極限状態を描く長篇。

モロッコの刑務所に収容された政治囚たちの極限状態を、暗闇と記憶のモチーフで描く長篇。拷問や沈黙、信仰と希望の関係を鋭く描写し、人間の尊厳と崩壊を問う詩的で重厚な作品だ。

書籍情報

出版社
Penguin Publishing Group
発売日
2006-01-31
ページ数
208ページ
言語
英語
サイズ
12.88 x 1.45 x 17.75 cm
ISBN-13
9780143035725
ISBN-10
014303572X
価格
2617 JPY
カテゴリ
洋書/Literature & Fiction/Genre Fiction/Historical

An immediate and critically acclaimed bestseller in France, This Blinding Absence of Light is the latest work by internationally renowned author Tahar Ben Jelloun, the first North African winner of the Prix Goncourt and winner of the Prix Mahgreb. Crafting real life events into narrative fiction, Ben Jelloun reveals the horrific story of the desert concentration camps in which King Hassan II of Morocco held his political enemies in underground cells with no light and only enough food and water to keep them lingering on the edge of death. Working closely with one of the survivors, Ben Jelloun narrates the story in the simplest of language and delivers a shocking novel that explores both the limitlessness of inhumanity and the impossible endurance of the human will.

Tahar Ben Jelloun was born in Fez, Morocco, and immigrated to France in 1961. A novelist, essayist, critic, and poet, he is a regular contributor to Le Monde , La Républica , El País , and Panorama .

レビュー

  • Very depressing book

  • A previous reviewer described this book as shocking and she is quite right, it is shocking. She also said she was glad she read it. Again, I totally agree. My review is simply to add a bit more background to that so the potential reader can understand why it is so shocking. The book is basically about the political prisoners from the Moroccan military who took part in the failed coup against the former king. They were incarcerated in a secret prison for over a decade in the desert and endured some of the worst conditions imaginable. The book is written from a first person point of view (And apparently this has caused some controversy due to the prisoner in question apparently accusing Ben Jelloun of plagiarism but thats another matter) The prisoners are in complete darkness in a single cell where they cannot stand up straight, the are pretty much kept there out of sight and out of mind. The book describes what they endured and it truly was awful (I had memories of watching the film Papillon as a kid) One part that really got me was one of the prisoners who kept his bread in a sack hanging in his cell eating a little at a time suddenly turning ill. It was only when the guards shone light in the cell they realised that the bag was full of cockroaches and he hadn't seen them in the dark! Ben Jelloun is an excellent writer, this book is extremely easy to read and I have to say its something I find quite remarkable about the author that you can pretty much read his books almost in one sitting, not because they are short of content or anything but simply because they are well written and well put together. I dont give 5 stars too often but this book deserves it.

  • very sad made me cry ...although a novel this prison does exist yes in 2021

  • This book, due to it being essentially all in darkness, becomes highly metaphysical at points, discussing ways in which the narrator and other prisoners dealt with the bafflingly horrid conditions they were subject to. Hurts your heart to read in many places, but also a story of the ever-overcoming and -transcending spirit of us humans. Also an eye opener to how prisoners may have been tortured in other parts of the Islamic world, although this certainly has to be one of the worst accounts of any torture, by any people. This novel is as much about the religious aspect of one who has every reason to curse fate yet still pursues his God as his ultimate savior, as well as witnessing the one of the most uncomfortably bent and hideously twisted corners of human history. Prose is fantastic. Short chapters, wide number of topics and occurrences hit on so it moves very fast. 189pg

  • I'd recommend this book to anyone. It's an eye-opening and tragic read based upon interviews of people imprisoned in underground prisons in Morocco. Thankful for Amnesty International and everyone else who helped release these prisoners.

関連する文学賞