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Fictions to Live In

Narration as an Argument for Fiction in Salman Rushdie's Novels

by Joel Kuortti (Author)
©1999 Thesis 267 Pages

Summary

Joel Kuortti's Fictions to Live In is a study of Rushdie's six novels to date: Grimus, Midnight's Children, Shame, The Satanic Verses, Haroun and the Sea of Stories and The Moor's Last Sigh. By analysing each of these individual texts, the present work aims at an evaluation of the status of fiction in these novels. It illustrates how one of the major implications of Rushdie's works is the argument for the centrality of fiction in human societies; that there is, in a way, an argument for fiction as an epistemology and, finally, an ethics. An argument for an ethics which seems to bring forth a third possibility, that which is both-and.

Details

Pages
267
Year
1999
ISBN (Softcover)
9783631338742
Language
English
Published
Frankfurt/M., Berlin, Bern, New York, Paris, Wien, 1998. 267 pp., 6 fig.

Biographical notes

Joel Kuortti (Author)

The Author: Joel Kuortti works in the Department of English at the University of Tampere, Finland. He is at present enjoying an Emil Aaltonen Foundation scholarship, extending his research on Indo-English writing. Kuortti has compiled a bibliography of Rushdie's works and their criticism, The Salman Rushdie Bibliography and Place of the Sacred, a study of the Satanic Verses Affair (both published by Peter Lang).

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Title: Fictions to Live In