A Critique of Grand Narrative in Salman Rushdie’s The Satanic Verses
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Central Department of English
Abstract
This research on Salman Rushdie's novel The Satanic Verses (1988) aims at analyzing
the novel in the light of the pluralistic, non-totalized and open-ended form of
postmodern discourse to make the point that a single discourse about the history,
religion and nationality of India is insufficient. Effects of imperialism, the mythologized
past of Islam, and interrogation of the unitary discourse of the Indian society are some
of the dominant issues in the novel. By bringing various discourses such as historical,
political, religious and national, Rushdie privileges a non-totalized, pluralistic, open- ended form of discourse theory asserting that a single discourse about any truth is
insufficient. Rushdie develops a postmodern discourse about India in the form of
postmodern critique of grand narratives.