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Changing spaces
Salman Rushdie's mapping of post-colonial territories
pp. 198-213
Abstract
Salman Rushdie is a writer of an expanding world. The settings of his novels — whether in India, England, Pakistan, USA, Kashmir, or South America — are all deeply implicated in the predicaments of intensified global exchange. Most of Rushdie's characters are migrants who follow the tides of their contemporary social processes and find themselves caught up in between different social and cultural settings, between the roots and the ramifications of different historical genealogies. The histories of their lives take place in spaces undergoing processes of radical change, just as their lives are changing the spaces in which they unfold.
Publication details
Published in:
Lange Attiede, Fincham Gail, Hawthorn Jeremy, Lothe Jakob, de Lange Attie (2008) Literary landscapes: from modernism to postcolonialism. Basingstoke, Palgrave Macmillan.
Pages: 198-213
Full citation:
Tygstrup Frederik (2008) „Changing spaces: Salman Rushdie's mapping of post-colonial territories“, In: A. Lange, G. Fincham, J. Hawthorn, J. Lothe & A. De Lange (eds.), Literary landscapes, Basingstoke, Palgrave Macmillan, 198–213.