Use of Unreliable Narrator in Salman Rushdie's Midnight's Children
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Department of English
Abstract
When we go through Salman Rushdie's Midnight's Children(1981) it seems
simply the story of more than thousands of children born at the time of independence
of India (midnight 15 August 1947) from British colony, but when we go deeply, the
novel talks about many aspects of Indian society like social, cultural, political etc. It
talks about the contemporary Indian society. The novel begins with the first person
pronoun 'I' and the narrator of the novel is Saleem Sinai, who is the main protagonist
of the novel.The novel is presented through his single perspective which creates many
mistakes while narrating the novel.Information given in the novel arenot all true.
History has been fictionalised through Saleem's perspective. Throughout his
narration, he is making many mistakes relating his family history to the events of
Indian history.Many dubious claims and errors are found in his narration.His
unreliable narration in the novel makes him unreliable narrator and this paper
focuses on the reasons behind using unreliable narrator.