17 research outputs found

    "Midnight's Children" and the Allegory of History

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    Foreign Possessions: Erna Brodber's "Myal," the Medium, and her Message

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    Bruce King, ed. New National and Post-Colonial Literatures: An Introduction.

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    George Lamming's "In the Castle of My Skin": Finding Promise in the Land

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    'Ain't it a Ripping Night': Alcoholism and the Legacies of Empire in Salman Rushdie's Midnight's Children.

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    In the era of decolonisation that followed the Second World War, various authors sought to engage with India and the Empire’s past anew throughout their novels, identifying medicine and illness as key parts of Imperial authority and colonial experience. Salman Rushdie’s approach to the Raj in Midnight’s Children (1981) focused on the broad sweep of colonial life, juxtaposing the political and the personal. This article argues that Rushdie explores the history of colonial India by employing alcohol and alcoholism as lenses through which to explore the cultural, political and medical legacies of Empire. Through analysis of Midnight’s Children as well as a range of medical sources related to alcohol and inebriation, it will illustrate how drinking is central to Rushdie’s approach to secular and religious identities in newly independent India, as well as a means of satirising and undermining the supposed benefit that Empire presented to India and Indians

    Roger Y. Clark. Stranger Gods: Salman Rushdie's Other Worlds

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    Robert Berold, ed. It All Begins: Poems from Postliberation South Africa.

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    How the Centre Is Made to Hold in Things Fall Apart

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    Stranger Gods: Salman Rushdie’s Other Worlds by Roger Y. Clark

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