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Abstract

This article offers a vivid portrait of Mohammed Khaïr-Eddine as a major—yet often marginalized—figure in Moroccan Francophone literature. It revisits the formative moments of his life to show how his personal journey fuels a writing of revolt—both poetic and uncompromising—directed against injustice, social hypocrisy, and political suffocation. The article highlights the stylistic power of Khaïr-Eddine’s work and explains how this very radicalism also contributed to misunderstanding and, later, to his relative obscurity in Morocco. Finally, it emphasizes the complexity of his identity and argues that he deserves to be rediscovered as an essential, free, and unsettling voice within Morocco’s literary heritage.

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