Skip to main content
User Image

Ebtisam Ali Sadiq

Professor

Professor of English

العلوم اﻹنسانية واﻻجتماعية
Bldg 1 / Fl 3 / Off 123
publication
Conference Paper
2012

Space versus Place in Rushdie’s Satanic Verses

Sadiq, Ebtisam Ali . 2012

Contemporary Novel

Salman Rushdie’s novel The Satanic Verses is a much contested piece of work. Its politics dichotomized responses into either condemnatory or supportive categories. In some forms of defense of its content, critics employed the principle of artistic necessity to explain the book’s transgression against Islamic ideology. This paper intends to neither defend nor condemn but rather to read the work through a postcolonial critical perspective and expose its limitations and inherent contradictions. The study suggests that Rushdie re-writes the history of Islam through a spatial perspective, a legitimate way of writing back to imperial forces and challenging essentialist world views. However, the author's utilization of spatial history discourse ironically exposes a hegemonic attitude and an imperialist stance on his part. His spatial sense of historic documentation simultaneously employs the metaphor of history as a theatre. Historical events as a theatre performance and the historian as an objective spectator are imperialist stances contested by postcolonial critics. The theatre metaphor is condemned as a colonialist practice that aims at subversion and control. Rushdie’s indulgence of the theatre metaphor negates his use of the traveler metaphor.  Such negation leads to questioning the efficiency and the legitimacy of his subversive attitude towards Islam.

Publication Work Type
Literary Criticism
Conference Location
Paris, France
Conference Name
International Congress of Humanities and Social Sciences Research
Sponsoring Organization
Analytrics, Strasburg, France
more of publication
publications

Marmaduke Pickthall is a British novelist who converted to Islam, translated the Quran and wrote profusely about the Arab world. He had an early warm reception in the literary circles of his time…

by Ebtisam Ali Sadiq
2016
Published in:
Partridge
publications

The thesis tackles Charlotte Bronte's deep interest in the East as reflected in her four major novels, The Professor, Jane Eyre, Shirley and Villette. Starting…

by Ebtisam Ali Sadiq
1982