This chapter analyzes Salman Rushdie's agonistic relationship with Islam as theology and as a geopolitical ideal. It explores Rushdie's lifelong engagement with Islam as a world-making power, and the limits and possibilities of reading his works theologically. The chapter argues that the magic realist mode that Rushdie deploys in novels such as The Satanic Verses, Midnight's Children, The Moor's Last Sigh, Shalimar the Clown, and Two Years Eight Months and Twenty-Eight Nights generates a novelistic vision of Islam that simultaneously aspires to a secularization of this embattled religious faith and a return to its philosophical and cultural riches in the late medieval era. It is generative, the chapter avers, to read the Satanic Verses cont...
After Iran’s spiritual leader, Ayatollah Khomeini, issued an edict against the author of The Satanic...
This dissertation explores the porous boundaries between Salman Rushdie's fiction and the various ma...
Otherworldly constructions such as "the Mountain of Qaf1 or "the Serpent" are seldom the focus of R...
This chapter analyzes Salman Rushdie's agonistic relationship with Islam as theology and as a geopol...
While much attention has been paid to the events which followed the publication of Salman Rushdie's ...
ABSTRACT This thesis is a twofold attempt at understanding the reception of Salman Rushdie’s novel ...
In this study, I examine Salman Rushdie’s fiction within the critical framework of globalization stu...
This paper is an inquiry into the critical tenability of the positioning of Salman Rushdie as brow...
This thesis seeks to explain the politics of Salman Rushdie’s fiction and situate the principal deb...
Even three decades after the publication of Salman Rushdie’s satiric novel, The Satanic Verses, the ...
Salman Rushdie\u27s The Satanic Verses created a major controversy when published in 1988, much like...
ENGLISH: The freedom of expression in literature has been much known since literature is assumed ...
Abstract The thesis looks at Rushdie s three first major novels (Midnight s Children, Shame and The...
This thesis argues that the shortcomings of modernist liberal defences of Salman Rushdie's The Satan...
This thesis in islamology shows how Salman Rushdie's novel The Satanic Verses (1988) examines questi...
After Iran’s spiritual leader, Ayatollah Khomeini, issued an edict against the author of The Satanic...
This dissertation explores the porous boundaries between Salman Rushdie's fiction and the various ma...
Otherworldly constructions such as "the Mountain of Qaf1 or "the Serpent" are seldom the focus of R...
This chapter analyzes Salman Rushdie's agonistic relationship with Islam as theology and as a geopol...
While much attention has been paid to the events which followed the publication of Salman Rushdie's ...
ABSTRACT This thesis is a twofold attempt at understanding the reception of Salman Rushdie’s novel ...
In this study, I examine Salman Rushdie’s fiction within the critical framework of globalization stu...
This paper is an inquiry into the critical tenability of the positioning of Salman Rushdie as brow...
This thesis seeks to explain the politics of Salman Rushdie’s fiction and situate the principal deb...
Even three decades after the publication of Salman Rushdie’s satiric novel, The Satanic Verses, the ...
Salman Rushdie\u27s The Satanic Verses created a major controversy when published in 1988, much like...
ENGLISH: The freedom of expression in literature has been much known since literature is assumed ...
Abstract The thesis looks at Rushdie s three first major novels (Midnight s Children, Shame and The...
This thesis argues that the shortcomings of modernist liberal defences of Salman Rushdie's The Satan...
This thesis in islamology shows how Salman Rushdie's novel The Satanic Verses (1988) examines questi...
After Iran’s spiritual leader, Ayatollah Khomeini, issued an edict against the author of The Satanic...
This dissertation explores the porous boundaries between Salman Rushdie's fiction and the various ma...
Otherworldly constructions such as "the Mountain of Qaf1 or "the Serpent" are seldom the focus of R...