Ministry of higher education, science and innovations termiz state pedagogical institute the faculty of foreign language and literature


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Fantasy writers.

2.2. XXI century fantasy writers
In recent decades, the best world-building fiction has begun to shed its roots in European mythology in favour of new ideas challenging the limits of the real.9
At the heart of every fantasy is something unreal, impossible, or at the very least, so extraordinary as to take us outside the universe we think we live in. Fantasy world-building surrounds those unreal things with recognisable furniture and plausible emotion, so that Coleridge’s “willing suspension of disbelief” can kick in. As writers from Tolkien to Pratchett have taught us, the task for both writers and readers is easier when the impossible involves motifs and storylines we recognise from oral narratives such as tales, legends and myths. That also ties most fantasy literature, up to the turn of the millennium, to European culture, because the myths we know are likely to be Greco-Roman or Norse; the tales, German or French or sometimes Scandinavian.
However, in this century, a new wave of fantasy challenges that European dominance. Writers of colour and writers from indigenous cultures use magical narratives to depict experiences and express viewpoints difficult to convey within the constraints of realism. One of the effects of fantasy is the way it forces us to consider the categories of the real, the possible and the ordinary – all the norms that fantasy violates. And, in particular, the new fantasy reveals how culture-bound those norms are. Non-European traditions mark off boundaries differently and include as natural entities things we might think of as supernatural. Out of those different ways of setting the limits of the possible and assigning meaning to the impossible come different versions of the fantastic.
The works I list here not only tell engaging stories set in vividly imagined worlds, they are also worth reading for the way their versions challenge our sense of the ordinary and the limits of the real.

  1. The New Moon’s Arms by Nalo Hopkinson (2007)

Caribbean Canadian writer Hopkinson is known for her science-fiction world-building, but she also excels at more intimate fantasies. The magic in this book involves the menopausal protagonist’s manifesting objects from her childhood as well as her encounter with a selkie child. The novel immerses readers in the sensory experience and social dynamics of its island setting, and its focus on the belated coming-of-age of a middle-aged woman challenges expectations about fantasy narratives.

  1. Who Fears Death by Nnedi Okorafor (2010)

Like much of Okorafor’s work, this novel draws on her experiences as the child of Nigerian immigrants, hearing stories and spending time with extended family in Africa. Protagonist Onyesonwu, whose name translated from Igbo provides the book’s title, is the child of rape, fitting into neither of two societies but inheriting powers from both sides of her parentage. In a switch from the conventional “chosen hero” narrative, Onyewonsu ends up rewriting the prophecies and remaking her world. In this and other science fantasies, Okorafor helped to invent a form she calls Africanfuturism, which has been embraced by readers and emulated by a talented new generation of African and diasporic writers including Oghenechovwe Donald Ekpeki and Khadija Abdalla Bajaber.

  1. Redwood and Wildfire by Andrea Hairston (2011)

Playwright and scholar Hairston pits Native and African American folklore against racism in this journey from the Jim Crow south to the beginnings of a Black movie industry at the Chicago World’s Fair. Stage magic converges with genuine conjuring to challenge violence and oppression. In a sequel, Will Do Magic for Small Change, Hairston follows her protagonists back to their African roots and forward into a future among artists, ghosts, and (surprisingly) aliens.

  1. Alif the Unseen by G Willow Wilson (2012)

Wilson was working as a journalist in Cairo during the Arab spring uprisings of the early 2010s. This World Fantasy award-winner combines computer hacking and Arabic mysticism in a dazzling tale of love, economic disparity, adventure, and the power of metaphor. Along the way, Wilson also satirises herself in the minor character of an American convert to Islam who is blind to most of the magic going on around her.

  1. A Stranger in Olondria by Sofia Samatar (2013)

In this gorgeously written tour of a complex secondary world, Samatar explores ghosts, culture clashes and the effect of written language on a purely oral culture, while also providing engaging characters and a rousing adventure story. The imagined world of the fiction reflects Samatar’s own immersion in multiple cultures as the daughter of a Somali immigrant and a scholar of Arabic literatures with teaching experience in Sudan and Egypt10.

  1. The Fifth Season by NK Jemisin (2015)

Jemisin won all the awards, and justly so, for the books of her Broken Earth trilogy, of which this is the first. The books might take place in a far future on a world that is not our Earth, but clearly they also connect with the here and now, with themes of climate change, environmental degradation, racial injustice and the burdens of the past. A daring second-person narration and a complex, admirable but not always likable hero make this book much more than the sum of its themes.

  1. The House of Shattered Wings by Aliette de Bodard (2015)

Alternating between science fiction and fantasy, de Bodard has already amassed an impressive number of Nebula, Locus, and British Science Fiction Association awards. This novel is the beginning of a gothic fantasy series involving fallen angels and a war that has left Paris half in ruins and contaminated by magical pollution. The contamination reaches the depths of the Seine, where, unknown to most people (and other beings) on land, a community of Annamese, or Vietnamese, dragons has taken refuge. The series reflects the multi-racial politics and multicultural reality of contemporary European cities.

  1. Black Sun by Rebecca Roanhorse (2020)

Roanhorse caught the attention of the fantasy and science fiction community in 2017 with a satirical short story called Welcome to Your Authentic Indian Experience. She followed that up with a pair of science fantasies juxtaposing Diné legends on a post-apocalyptic landscape, and, in Black Sun and its sequels, has ventured into epic fantasy. Her fantasy world is a magical version of Meso-America without European invasion: its conflicts result from tensions within and between the factions and religious cults of the continent of Meridien.

  1. The Water Dancer by Ta-Nehisi Coates (2020)

With this book, Coates moved deftly from nonfiction to novel-writing. His story is set in the pre-civil war south but rarely uses the word “slave” to describe the people Coates calls Tasked. Rich historical detail conveys the terrible effect of the Task on everyone caught in the system, and especially young, gifted Hiram Walker. Walker’s own Task includes tending to the feckless legitimate son of the master, who is his half-brother. From his mother, Hiram has inherited an unpredictable magical gift of escape, the Water Dancing of the title. As he learns to harness this gift, he goes to work for the great Harriet Tubman. Like Octavia Butler in Kindred, Coates finds the horrors of slavery too overwhelming for mere realism: only the fantastic can take the reader into such a world.

  1. A Master of Djinn by P Djèlí Clark (2021)

Historian Clark departs from his studies of the American past in this magical alternate history set in a steampunk Cairo in the early 20th century. The novel is a mystery featuring a stubborn female detective taking on powerful human and non-human adversaries. The real interest is not so much in the plot as the characters’ interaction and the richly detailed setting. This Cairo is a meeting-place of east and west, north and south (one of the recurring themes is the racial profiling of Nubians and Abyssinians by the paler Egyptian aristocracy), past and present, science and magic, all deftly invoked in details of architecture, costume and custom.
The free press is under attack from multiple forces. Media outlets are closing their doors, victims to a broken business model. In much of the world, journalism is morphing into propaganda, as governments dictate what can and can’t be printed. In the last year alone, hundreds of reporters have been killed or imprisoned for doing their jobs. The UN reports that 85% of the world’s population experienced a decline in press freedom in their country in recent years.11 
This week marks the 30th annual World Press Freedom Day, a day for everyone to reflect on the importance of free expression as fundamental for all other rights. It is also an opportunity to pledge support for independent media – because without a robust and free press, a healthy democracy is impossible.
As you’re joining us today from Uzbekistan, we hope you will consider marking this day by supporting the Guardian. Despite the financial challenges plaguing the media industry, we’ve decided to keep our journalism paywall-free, because we deeply believe everyone has the right to access high-quality, fact-checked reporting. And we maintain our independence thanks to generosity from readers all over the world, who understand that supporting the free press is an investment in an informed and empowered public. 
Unlike many others, we have no billionaire owner – this helps us maintain the freedom to fearlessly chase the truth and report it with integrity. Your support will allow us to continue to work with trademark determination and passion to bring you journalism that’s always free from commercial or political interference. 
We also encourage you to support one of the many, smaller independent news organisations around the world. Over the years, we’ve collaborated with teams who are often publishing quality reporting in the face of great adversity. We have shared our expertise with them, helping to start and grow their own reader funding models. If this interests you, find out more about our work with outlets in Russia, Belarus, Ukraine, Turkey, Hungary and beyond. 
J.K. Rowling has led a “true success” journey, rising from being a welfare recipient to being named the world’s first millionaire novelist by Forbes. She swept the globe by storm in 1997. Rowling, a British novelist, and philanthropist created one of her best works, Harry Potter, and audiences received their modern-day wizard. Rowling first imagined the character and his magical realm while traveling from Manchester to London King’s Cross in 1990. ‘the Hogwarts School of Witchcraft and Wizardry’ took her about seven years to design.
It was a revolution not just in the world of fantasy fiction, but it also altered our childhood recollections of wizards and how we imagined them to be. A completely new dictionary of magic and fantasies was introduced to young readers. Harry Potter, Hermione Granger, and Ron Weasley all rose to fame overnight.12 Harry Potter books captivated young readers, and Hogwarts School of Witchcraft and Wizardry, as well as Rowling’s first in the series, Harry Potter and the Philosopher’s Stone, became critically regarded in young adult literature.
Fantasy fiction has a long history dating back to the early nineteenth century. Many authors were inspired by mystical and fantastical elements. Arabian Nights and other similar stories set the tone for fantasy fiction. People were becoming more open to the idea of magical carpets, lights, and other tricks. They were captivated by “Aladdin’s Wonderful Lamp,” “Ali Baba and the Forty Thieves,” and “The Seven Voyages of Sinbad the Sailor.” JRR Tolkien’s The Lord of the Rings set the tone for epic fantasy in the twentieth century.
In 1865, English author Charles Lutwidge Dodgson, writing under the pen name Lewis Carroll, introduced adults and children to Alice in Wonderland, a fantastical world filled with anthropomorphic creatures. Its story was straightforward and hugely influential, particularly in the fantasy genre. And in the 1950s, everyone was talking about C.S. Lewis’s The Chronicles of Narnia. Lewis’ series captivated readers by opening Pandora’s box of witches, wizards, and flying creatures.
J.K. Rowling Masterclass. The buzz and excitement around the Harry Potter series will be difficult to replicate in the literary world. J.K. Rowling’s talent is clear; her writing style is so thorough and descriptive that the images in your imagination are practically palpable. Her narrative is astounding, proving to be so much more than invisibility cloaks, time-turners, and Felix felicis. Here are six reasons Harry Potter stands out from the rest of the genre.
1. It grows with the audience
J.K Rowling could compose something that began relatively simple in its writing style and progressed to something a lot more sophisticated and complex. The volumes were issued gradually, with some taking up to two years between publications, so the readers grew up throughout the book series.
2. It tackles loss
J.K. Rowling narrates a story of a young boy whose parents were murdered when he was a baby, leaving him with a family who doesn’t want him, and death and gloom follow him about. But death is a natural part of life, and teaching children about grief is critical. Harry lost his parents, but he surrounded himself with powerful friends and role models, forming his own family to provide the parental care he lacked.
3. Promotes power of knowledge
J.K Rowling showed that power does not always come from having massive muscles or being intimidating with characters like Hermione and Dumbledore. They showed that knowledge and intelligence are as, if not more, vital.
4. It talks of sacrifice
In the Harry Potter series, sacrifice is all for the greater good, and many characters give something up for the sake of others. Dumbledore’s Army and the Order of the Phoenix faced death, striving for a better future. At the end of Harry Potter and the Half-Blood Prince, Harry gave up his chance at a regular adolescent life, turning his back on finishing his school years to rescue the wizarding world’s future.
5. Strong female characters
J.K Rowling has used feminism as a major theme in Harry Potter without overdoing it or forcing it. Consider some of the female characters: Hermione Granger, Molly Weasley, and Minerva McGonagall.
6. The love stories
The series gives importance to relationships with friendship and family love. For instance, between the Weasleys, the Order, and the DA, everyone in Harry’s life is significant. Lily Potter, the mother’s love, risked her life to keep her son safe. Dumbledore’s love for his sister Ariana, who accidentally killed their mother, and the effects of her demise on Albus later in life. But the most moving love story of them is Severus Snape’s, unrequited love.
Myths, stories, and folklore were all part of fantastic works, but modern fantasy literature decisively distinguished itself. It took us on a voyage far from reality, to a distinct universe where everything is unreal and we could only fantasize. Many authors used this notion to tease readers’ fantasies and push them to change their reading habits. JK Rowling was the most successful of these authors. The readers were so engrossed in this fantasy series that they didn’t notice when the world of magic carpets, potions, and wizards gave way to Hogwarts, magic brooms, and wands.



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