--- title: Salman Rushdie | British Council Literature date: 2006-06-25T22:41:05Z source: http://www.contemporarywriters.com/authors/?p=auth87 tags: travel, literature, books --- ##### How to capture, within 1001 words, all the hype and hyper-realism, the epic scale and elephantine form, the textual pyrotechnics and verbal exuberance, the notoriety and over-sized celebrity, of a writer as gigantic as Salman Rushdie? One response would be to fall to pieces, as Saleem does, quite literally, when faced with the sheer size and incommensurability of India's history in _Midnight's Children_ (1981). Another would be to run with the hyperbole, as does cultural critic Sukhdev Sandhu: 'Rushdie … is one of the world's most famous writers. Any upscale Manhattan party on whose dancefloor he hasn't shaken his ass by midnight might be considered a failure. His novels sell in their hundreds of thousands, _Midnight's Children _(1981) was adjudged Booker of Bookers in 1994.' (Sandhu, 2003) We might add to this impressive list that Rushdie's writing has spawned a minor academic industry of its own, with over 700 articles and chapters already written on his fiction, and no less than 30 book-length studies focusing on Rushdie's life and works. The problem with this hyperbolic approach is that it leads to sweeping generalisations about Rushdie that ignore, as Sandhu goes on to point out, 'the historical and geographical specificities which give his fictions such gristle and throb'. A more modest, microscopic account of Rushdie would seem sensible in this context: one that can account for the formal plasticity of the author's work in terms of Indian oral traditions rather than global postmodernism; or his cinematic allusions in terms of Bombay cinema of the 1950s rather than a general, Westernised conception of 'Bollywood'; or his writing in terms of its discrete literary concerns, minor shifts of emphasis and thematic developments, rather than through catch-all labels such as 'magic realism' or 'post-colonialism'.  Indeed, it could be argued that the continued critical neglect of Rushdie's first novel, _Grimus_ (1975) has to do in part with its atypical qualities and its stubborn resistance to generalisations as such. _Grimus _was even idiosyncratic in terms of its immediate reception, being something of a flop when first published, or 'too clever for its own good' in the author's words. The novel is set on the imaginary Calf Island and follows the quest of Flapping Eagle by way of a curious blend of styles that incorporates modernism and existentialism, American Indian and Sufi mythologies, as well as allegory and science fiction. Unlike his subsequent writing, all of which reveals a firmly geographical imagination (despite and perhaps because of its preoccupation with dislocation), there is a certain boundlessness about Rushdie's first novel, which critics like Timothy Brennan have argued explain its neglect. What is suggestive in terms of the later fiction is Rushdie's fascination with the central ideas of admixture and migration. _Midnight's Children_ (1981); _Shame _(1983); and _The Satanic Verses_ (1988) are Rushdie's best known works to date, and are sometimes regarded together as a trilogy. _Midnight's Children_ is, among other things, a fictional history of post-Independence India, a story we are asked to read through the lens of Saleem Sinai's life. Born in the midnight hour of Independence, Saleem, along with 1001 other children, is gifted with magical powers which lead in both creative and destructive directions. Born to poor Hindu parents, brought up by wealthy Muslims, Saleem is a bastard child of history and a metaphor for the post-colonial nation. According to Rushdie the falsification of history in _Midnight's Children_ was a symptom of his own status as a migrant writer living in London and trying to capture an imaginary homeland through the imperfections of childhood memory. It is this theme of migration which grows increasingly central to the content of the next two novels. _Shame_ is a magic realist rendering of Pakistan, and like _Midnight's Children_ uses a private family saga as a thinly-veiled allegorical model for the nation's public and political history. The ancestral home upon which the novel focuses is a gothic, subterranean and labyrinthine setting where the windows only look inwards. As such it serves to suggest the dark violence, repressive consciousness and secretive character associated with Pakistan in the tumultuous years after 1947. In _The Satanic Verses_ the schizophrenic migrant imagination that intermittently erupts into the primary narrative fabric of _Shame_ takes a hold of the entire text. The novel begins nearly 30,000 feet above sea-level in the aftermath of a terrorist attack on an aeroplane. As the Indian protagonists Saladhin Chamcha and Gibreel Farishta tumble to the ground, they begin to metamorphose into satanic and angelic forms.  The novel's depiction of the history of Islam famously resulted in a _fatwa_ being pronounced on Rushdie. Beyond the offending passages, however, is a novel that is as critical of Thatcherism as it is of Islam, with both 1980s London and ancient Jahilia/Mecca becoming parallel universes associated with emergent cultures of intolerance and fundamentalism. Written in the shadow of the fatwa, _Haroun and the Sea of Stories_ (1990) is a children's story for adults and a gripping allegorical defence of the power of stories over silence. Similarly, his next novel, _The Moor's Last Sigh_ (1995), though reminiscent in certain respects of _Midnight's Children_, and set mainly in India, deals with themes of isolation and death that recall the author and the 'Affair'. _The Ground Beneath Her Feet_ (1999) is an altogether more exuberant novel. Both a love story and a history of rock music from the margins, the book is a celebration of some of Rushdie's central themes to date (movement, hybridity, transformation) by way of Greek mythology and the Orpheus/Eurydice myth. Along with his next novel, _Fury _(2001), _The Ground Beneath her Feet_ suggests a new preoccupation with issues of globalisation (rather than the 'mere' transnationalism of earlier works). In other ways though, _Fury_ is another atypical novel. Set mainly in New York and relatively detached from South Asian contexts, the book is Rushdie's most condensed fiction to date, avoiding the characteristic sprawling narrative strands that span generations, periods, and places. _Shalimar the Clown_ (2005), Rushdie's ninth novel to date, has been hailed by a number of critics as a return to form. Set in Kashmir and Los Angeles, it develops many of the themes present in _Fury_ but, according to _The Observer_, in a 'calmer' and 'more compassionate' manner. Ostensibly a story about love and betrayal (familiar themes in Rushdie's earlier work), there is a fresh urgency about this book with its meditations on post-9/11 terrorism. _The Enchantress of Florence_ (2008), Rushdie's next novel, was also one of his most structurally challenging works to date. It is beyond simple summary and represents, on the surface at least, a turn from present to past, from politics to poetics (of course, the two are mutually constitutive). Focusing on a European's visit to Akbar's court, and his revelation that he is a lost relative of the Mughal emperor, the novel was reviewed in glowing terms in the _Guardian_ as a 'sumptuous mixture of history with fable'. In 2012, Rushdie published his long awaited memoir, _Joseph Anton_ (a combination of two of his favourite authors: Conrad and Chekhov). The 650-page book is a treasure trove for fans of the writer. Written in the third person, _Joseph Anton _contains intimate portraits of Rushdie's parents and first wife, Clarissa; his years in hiding and his mixed relations with the police who were his guardians; his literary and political friends and foes; as well as a whole string of tantalizing biographical insights into the mind of the man behind the stories. Rushdie's most recent novel is a sequel to _Haroun and the Sea of Stories_, and one of his most critically acclaimed works in recent years. _Luka and the Fire of Life_ (2010) returns initiated readers to the familiar landscape of Alifbay and the world of Haroun and his great storytelling father, Rashid. When Rashid falls, unexpectedly, into a deep sleep, it is only Luka, Haroun's younger brother (now not so young: eighteen years have passed since his adventure), who can save him from oblivion. It is a rescue attempt that takes Luka on a magical journey that rivals even _Haroun_. While Rushdie has always been best known as a novelist, he is also an artful essayist (_Imaginary Homelands_, 1991 and _Step Across This Line_, 2002); an influential, and sometimes controversial, editor (_The Vintage Book of Indian Writing_, 1997 and _The Best American Short Stories_, 2008); a surprisingly economical short story writer (_East, West_, 1994) and an astute cultural critic (_The Wizard of Oz_, 1992). For Rushdie, it seems, excess, superabundance, and multiplicity are more than just aesthetic concerns, they are also a vocation. Dr J Procter, 2013 For an in-depth critical review see _Salman Rushdie _by Damian Grant (Northcote House, 1999: Writers and their Work Series).