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Pradip Kumar Dey : Salman Rushdie's Midnight's Children (The Atlantic Critical Studies)
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Author: Pradip Kumar Dey
Title: Salman Rushdie's Midnight's Children (The Atlantic Critical Studies)
Moochable copies: No copies available
Topics:
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Published in: India
Binding: Hardcover
Pages: 168
Date: 2008-02-05
ISBN: 8126909137
Publisher: Atlantic Publishers & Distributors (P) Ltd.
Weight: 0.75 pounds
Size: 0.0 x 0.0 x 0.0 inches
Wishlists:
2Ray Palen (USA), J (USA: PA).
Description: Product Description
Midnights Children, the second novel of Salman Rushdie, was published in 1981. In this epical novel he speaks of many Indians and many versions of reality. High seriousness of the elderly writers, like Raja Rao or R.K. Narayan, is replaced in his fiction by playfulness, comicality and triviality. Midnights Children remains an Indian novel in the sense that the author delves deep into Indian psyche and unearths rich ore of ancient indigenous resources like epic, folklore, oral myth and rituals which till date inform the mind and belief system of the millions in a substantial way. To know the mind of the subcontinent one should know the archetypal mythical figure of Ganesh and his large elephantine nose and ears. The urge for largeness or bigness exemplifies one Indian disease, a desire for the whole. The narrator hero of the novel Midnights Children, Saleem Sinai suffers from this Indian disease and proclaims, To understand just one life, you have to swallow the world. Midnights Children remains an impure text because the protagonists are of illegitimate birth and Saleem has four fathers and three mothers in a fairy-tale fashion. Though a post-modern text, the hero Saleem does not suffer from alienation nor does he feel an exile in a society of teeming millions who jostle in and around him. Alienated self is an absurdity in an Indian context where a sensitive soul cant afford exilic status vis à-vis abundance, multiplicity, plurality, diverse customs and mores which exercise a magnetic spell on his mind. After Rushdie, Indian fiction is not what it was. Midnights Children remains a classic of post-colonial Indian writing, a novel of novels. The present book is a modest attempt at understanding the mind and art of Salman Rushdie, with particular reference to his Midnights Children. Written in a textbook form, it provides a detailed critical analysis of its major themes, issues, characterization, narrative techniques, style and symbols. Besides, it makes a critical study of the reception of the novel. The model questions included herein will facilitate the quick revision of the entire study. Bibliography and Index will prove useful study-aids in pursuing the study further and easily. Since the novel is prescribed in the English syllabus in the universities of India, both the teachers and the students will find this book extremely useful.
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