This article examines Dreams of Maryam Tair: Blue Boots and Orange Blossoms by Moroccan author Mhani Alaoui through the critical frameworks of trauma theory, magical realism, feminist criticism, and queer theory. Responding to the Eurocentric bias in early trauma studies, it foregrounds the concept of insidious trauma—defined as cumulative psychic wounds inflicted by systemic violence, colonial erasure, gender oppression, and sexual marginalization. The study argues that Alaoui’s use of magical realism functions as both a narrative strategy and a political tool to render such traumas visible through myth, the grotesque, and the surreal. The article develops three key arguments: first, that magical realism offers an alternative trauma discourse capable of representing colonial, gendered, and historical traumas that elude linear narrative structures; second, that female characters such as Leila, Aisha, and Maryam embody a genealogy of feminist resistance against patriarchal structures; and third, that figures like Zohra and Maryam evoke a radical queer grotesquery that destabilizes heteronormative and androcentric paradigms. These intersecting modes of resistance collectively reimagine possibilities for healing, solidarity, and survival. By engaging a relatively underexplored North African text, this study expands trauma theory’s geopolitical and epistemic dimensions, challenging dominant paradigms of representability and recovery. Alaoui’s novel, it argues, offers a transhistorical feminist and queer counter-archive that critiques systemic violence while queering narrative form itself. In doing so, it contributes to an inclusive, culturally grounded understanding of trauma and affirms literature’s power to reclaim marginalized voices and resist historical erasure.
Kholoud Letrach (Wed,) studied this question.