"What's Real and What's True Aren't Necessarily the Same" Interrogating Identity and The Fantastic in Salman Rushdie's Midnight's Children and The Satanic Verses

dc.contributor.advisorBerman, Jessica
dc.contributor.authorRudacille, Victoria Anne
dc.contributor.departmentEnglish
dc.contributor.programTexts, Technologies, and Literature
dc.date.accessioned2019-10-11T13:56:11Z
dc.date.available2019-10-11T13:56:11Z
dc.date.issued2017-01-01
dc.description.abstractThis theses examines Salman Rushdie'suse of the fantastic to construct multiple conceptions of Indian national identity in Midnight'sChildren and The Satanic Verses. In both texts, the "irruptions of the fantastic" work to establish Rushdie'scharacters? mixed identifications with their individualized conceptions of Indian heritage and their individualized conceptions of modernity. With each character, Rushdie complicates any essentialist notion of Indian heritage, European-influenced modernity, and Eastern modernity by presenting his characters as hybrid beings whose identification continuously shifts throughout both texts, to prove that few characters remain fixed in their identification with any of these notions; their shifts in identification tell the reader much about their individualized constructions of India from both within the nation?in Midnight'sChildren?and outside the nation?in The Satanic Verses. It is argued that a character'sreaction to "irruptions of the fantastic" in both texts determines where that character'sidentification lies in this complex schema, whether they are identifying more with their conception of heritage or more with their conception of modernity at that point in the text, and how those conceptions of heritage and modernity present Rushdie'slarger construction of India as a postmodern, postcolonial nation.
dc.genretheses
dc.identifierdoi:10.13016/m25yoj-wczr
dc.identifier.other11685
dc.identifier.urihttp://hdl.handle.net/11603/15539
dc.languageen
dc.relation.isAvailableAtThe University of Maryland, Baltimore County (UMBC)
dc.relation.ispartofUMBC English Department Collection
dc.relation.ispartofUMBC Theses and Dissertations Collection
dc.relation.ispartofUMBC Graduate School Collection
dc.relation.ispartofUMBC Student Collection
dc.rightsThis item may be protected under Title 17 of the U.S. Copyright Law. It is made available by UMBC for non-commercial research and education. For permission to publish or reproduce, please see http://aok.lib.umbc.edu/specoll/repro.php or contact Special Collections at speccoll(at)umbc.edu
dc.sourceOriginal File Name: Rudacille_umbc_0434M_11685.pdf
dc.subjectMagic realism
dc.subjectMidnight's Children
dc.subjectSalman Rushdie
dc.subjectThe Fantastic
dc.subjectThe Satanic Verses
dc.subjectTzvetan Todorov
dc.title"What's Real and What's True Aren't Necessarily the Same" Interrogating Identity and The Fantastic in Salman Rushdie's Midnight's Children and The Satanic Verses
dc.typeText
dcterms.accessRightsDistribution Rights granted to UMBC by the author.

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