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Salman Rushdie: General Introduction: His life of multiple migration

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Title: Salman Rushdie: General Introduction: His life of multiple migration


1
Salman Rushdie General Introduction His life
of multiple migration
  • 1947 born in Bombay, son of a Cambridge-educated
    merchant of Muslim background
  • 1961 Studied in England
  • 1964 moved with his family from Bombay to
    Pakistan

2
Salman Rushdie General Introduction (2)
  • 1975 Grimus 1987 The Jaguar Smile A
    Nicaraguan Journey 1990 Haroun and the Sea of
    Stories
  • 1980 Midnight's Children
  • 1983 Shame
  • 1989 The Satanic Verses 1989, Feb.
    "fatwa"
  • 1991 Imaginary Homelands
  • 1994 East, West
  • 1995 The Moor's Last Sigh
  • 1999 The Ground Beneath her Feet

3
Questions
  • Definitions and Implications immigrant,
    emigrant, expatriates, exile, contract laborers.
  • What are special about immigrant literature and
    writers?

4
Rushdies position as an immigrant writer
  • Third-World Cosmopolitans like Derek Walcott,
    Gabriel Garcia Marques and Bharati Mukherjee, V.
    S. Naipaul and Michael Ondaatje, and ??.
  • They live in or write to a metropolitan center,
    carrying with them a third-world, or
    multicultural, background.
  • The complexity of their positions
  • 1. Enabling, The Empire Writes Back.
  • 2. Awkward. Is Rushdie a "'British-resident
    Indo-Pakistani writer'? Who do they write to?
    What do they write about?

5
Rushdie migrant identity
  • What is the best thing about migrant peoples and
    seceded nations? I think it is their
    hopefulness... And what is the worst thing? It
    is the emptiness of one's luggage....We have
    floated upwards from history, from memory, from
    Time. (Shame 70-71)
  • Pakistan is a part of the world to which,
    whether I like it or not, I am still joined, if
    only by elastic bands. (Shame 23)
  • It maybe be argued that the past is a country
    from which we have all migrated, that its loss is
    part of our common humanity. . . . (Imaginary
    Homelands)

6
Rushdie Pakistan migrant writer
  • Although I have known Pakistan for a long time, I
    have never lived there for longer than six months
    at a stretch...I have learned Pakistan by
    slices...however I choose to write about
    over-there, I am forced to reflect that in
    fragments of broken mirrors...I must reconcile
    myself to the inevitability of the missing bits.
    ... (Shame 70)
  • Immigrant writer "the ability to see at once
    from inside and out is a great thing, a piece of
    good fortune which the indigenous writer cannot
    enjoy." (IH 4)
  • The only people who see the whole picuture. . .
    Are the ones who step out of the frame. (The
    Ground 43)

7
Other metaphors or descriptions of immigrant
writers
  • Potted plant (Neil Bissoondath)
  • Immigration is a one-way road there is no home
    to return to. (Stuart Hall)

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8
Salman Rushdie Major Themes
  • India/Pakistans National Identity vs. British
    colonization Indian diaspora
  • His definition of migrant identity and the themes
    of Indian diaspora in Imaginary Homelands
  • His use of English language.
  • Colonialism and Gender/Power Struggle
  • General Introduction to Midnights Children

9
Imaginary Homelands
  • 1. The past is a foreign country, so is the
    present.
  • 2. Memory Exiled writers need to look back
    and create imaginary homelands. (10)
  • -- deal in broken mirrors (p. 11)
  • In spite of all the evidence that life is
    discontinuous, a valley of rifts, and that random
    chance plays a great part in our fates, we go on
    believing in the continuity of things, in
    causation and meaning. But we live on a broken
    mirror (Ground 31)

10
Imaginary Homelands
  • 1. The past is a foreign country, so is the
    present.
  • 2. Memory
  • -- p. 121) fragmentation turns things symbolic
    2) a subject of universal significance and
    appeal 3) meaning is a shaky edifice.
  • -- Why writes about the past? -- political
    functions
  • p. 14 the first step towards changing it.
  • -- guilt p. 15

11
Imaginary Homelands
  • 3. About Midnights Children and India
  • 1) Saleem, an unreliable narrator
  • 2) India, its non-sectarian philosophy,
  • 3) Indian talent for non-stop self-regeneration.
  • 4. White culture 1) The use of English p. 17
    "to conquer English may be to complete the
    process of making ourselves free".
  • 5. British Indian identity. p. 19 1) As
    both insiders and outsiders, they present
    alternative reality, mingling reality and
    naturalism.
  • 2) Against ghetto mentality they have two
    traditions.

12
Midnights Children
  • Plot Exactly at midnight on Aug. 15, 1947, two
    boys are born in a Bombay hospital, where they
    are switched by a nurse. Around that time, a
    thousand children were born and they are the
    midnight children.

Hindu woman British colonialist
Saleem
Aziz Naseem
Muslim couple (Mumtaz Ahmed)
Shiva
13
Midnights Children Plot (2)
  • Midnight Children as a national allegory
  • from cultural conflicts and national movements in
    the colonial period
  • to the birth of the
    nation as well as its 3000 midnights children
  • to the gradual
    fragmentation of Saleems body, the children, and
    the nation

14
Midnights Children narrative methods
  • The narrator and narrative methods (p. 3)
  • Digressive, foreboding and summarizing.
  • Talking about his own writings.
  • A mixture of tones humorous, poetic, crude and
    with ribald jokes (e.g. snot)
  • Mixing the personal and the historical/political
  • Motifs -- e.g. hole in the nose, perforated
    sheet, p. 13 - snot nose, black mango,

15
Midnights Children Cultural Identity
  • e.g. grandfather Aziz

Indian belief
Aziz
German knowledge
Boatman Tai
His mother
Ghanis house
His wife
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