This study aims to investigate the interrelation between cyber literature contexts and general norms of Arabic societies and reveal how cyber literature affects these norms. The study applies the method of textual and comparative analysis for the chosen case studies of Ghada Abdou Aal, Ahmad Khaled Tawfiq, and stories on Wattpad. The paper contends that cyber literature is a fluid and dynamic platform/ technology by which hegemonic social values within Arab Islamic societies are remapped and challenged. It is a discursive space through which authors, specifically marginalized communities such as women and youths, can subvert hegemonic cultural discourses, negotiate their identities, and manufacture consensual knowledge of gender, morality, and power in cyberspace. The main hypothesis is that cyber fiction is a driver of resisting and overturning conventional Arab Muslim social norms. The study employs three methods: text analysis, case study, and comparative study of three novels: Ghada Abdou Aal’s I Want to Get Married, Ahmad Khaled Tawfiq’s Utopia, and typical stories on the Arabic Wattpad Platform. The paper verifies that cyber literature subverts, remodifies, and negotiates the limits of traditional norms within Arab Muslim society.
Fatima Ali Al-Khamisi (Sat,) studied this question.