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Salman Rushdie and the Genesis of Secrecy
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Table of Contents

Preface and Acknowledgments

Prologue: 'And what so tedious as a twice-told tale'
1. Archive Fever: The 'Biografiend' and the Genesis of Secrecy
2. Manuscripts in the Archive
3. The Riddle of Midnight’s Children: Unravelling a Text
4. The Affective Turn and Salman Rushdie
5. Salman Rushdie Cinema and Bollywood
6. Archival Modernism
Epilogue: Salman Rushdie Humanism and World Literature

Bibliography
Index

Promotional Information

The first book to make use of the Salman Rushdie archive at Emory University to explore the makings of the contemporary British Indian writer's canon.

About the Author

Vijay Mishra is Professor of English and Comparative Literature at Murdoch University, Australia. He has two doctorates, the first from the Australian National University in Medieval Indian Poetry and Aesthetics, the second from the University of Oxford in 18th-Century English Literature. He has written widely on literary and cultural studies, including Annotating Salman Rushdie: Reading the Postcolonial (2018), What Was Multiculturalism?: A Critical Retrospective (2012), The Literature of the Indian Diaspora: Theorizing the Diasporic Imaginary (2007), Bollywood Cinema: Temples of Desire (2002), Devotional Poetics and the Indian Sublime (1998), The Gothic Sublime (1994) and Dark Side of the Dream: Australian Literature and the Postcolonial Mind (with Bob Hodge, 1991).

Reviews

An enjoyable journey into the life, dreams and imperfections of a writer who straddles an uncomfortable position between the East and the West
*C21 Literature*

This new book provides an in-depth study of all of Rushdie’s published fiction, and it is enriched by Mishra's access to the voluminous Rushdie archive housed at Emory University. One learns about Rushdie’s education, his literary enthusiasms, and the terrible drama that unfolded after the publication of Satanic Verses (1988)—the infamous fatwa that threatened his life during the ensuing ten years and changed the course of Rushdie’s life and work. Throughout, the discussion is informed by literary theory, and figures as distant as Freud and Marx are referenced along with more contemporary thinkers such as Derrida and Edward Said. Most fascinating is the chapter on the archival holdings relevant to Rushdie’s major work Midnight’s Children (1981). Summing Up: Recommended.
*CHOICE*

Through its breadth, depth, and urgency, Salman Rushdie and the Genesis of Secrecy is sure to instill curiosity about, and warmth toward, Rushdie and his works in a new generation of scholars ... This is an insightful and compelling text with much to say to scholars of literature, culture, and history.
*Modern Fiction Studies*

Salman Rushdie and the Genesis of Secrecy brings together Mishra’s meticulous research on the writer with astute critical, theoretical and conceptual analysis ... Offering detailed and sustained analyses of Rushdie’s influences, Mishra manages to wrestle Rushdie away from the postcolonial stranglehold to open up an enlarged frame of vision of his work.
*The Review of English Studies*

At last: a properly researched, profoundly erudite book on Rushdie that gets the usual labels –– 'Indian', 'postcolonial', 'postmodern' –– off his back.
*Graham Huggan, Professor of Commonwealth and Postcolonial Literatures, University of Leeds, UK*

This far-reaching, stimulating study explores a rich array of new approaches to one of the most significant writers of our time, Salman Rushdie. The leading Rushdie scholar Vijay Mishra builds on exhaustive reading of the Emory Rushdie archive to uncover realist, modernist, postmodern, and magic realist as well as the more usual postcolonial approaches to the writer. A must-read for all readers of Rushdie, this book has all the makings of a critical classic.
*Elleke Boehmer FEA, Professor of World Literature, University of Oxford, UK*

Vijay Mishra’s dedication to the Salman Rushdie archive represents a significant contribution to the study of the postcolonial novel. He is a meticulous reader of texts and pre-texts and therefore has a fine grasp of the of the intellectual histories and cultural lineages of the Rushdie oeuvre. The “finished” work is always renewed and refreshed by a study of the crucible of its making. Students of Rushdie’s remarkable novels will profit from keeping company with Mishra’s prolific insights.
*Homi K. Bhabha, Professor of the Humanities, Harvard University, USA*

One of the most significant paperbacks to have been released in humanities publishing in 2021 ... a compelling and thoroughly progressive book.
*Media International Australia*

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