"Salman Khan" Essays and Research Papers

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    Ahmed Khan advised the Muslims to avoid active politics. To understand the significance of the Aligarh movement let us have a glance at the background of the Aligarh Movement Background: Indian authority was shifted from the Muslim to the British hands‚ as a result of the failure of the War of independence. This great debacle shook the entire structure of South Asia’s‚ social and political life to the depth of its roots. This course of events gave birth to a person like Sir Syed Ahmed Khan. Sir

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    Haroun Essay

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    The Versatility of Stories Through Haroun Khalifa’s adventure on the story moon of Kahani‚ Salman Rushdie discloses to readers the value of stories that are not even true. In Rushdie’s Haroun and the Sea of Stories‚ the author illustrates how powerful and versatile fictional stories are to real life. From the colorful Ocean of the Streams of Stories to the conflicting Lands of Gup and Chup‚ Rushdie creates a world within the novel that undoubtedly and continually portrays the point of made-up tales

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    East West

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    Good Advice Is Rarer than Rubies by Salman Rushdie Brief summary One Tuesday morning‚ the beautiful Miss Rehana leaves a bus in front of the British Consulate somewhere in Pakistan. Her parents are dead‚and her fiancé‚who lives in Bradford and who she has not seen since she was nine years old‚has sent for her‚and she has come to apply for a visa to immigrate to Britain. She is immediately accosted (D.: jmd.ansprechen) by the advice expert Muhammad Ali‚who is so attracted to the beautiful young

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    79 91 Abdelaziz El Amrani

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    THE POST-9/11 WORLD IN SALMAN RUSHDIE’S SHALIMAR THE CLOWN ABDELAZIZ EL AMRANI* Abstract. The present paper attempts to address the issue of “nonidentity” and “glocalization” in the post-9/11 context in Salman Rushdie’s Shalimar the Clown. In other words‚ we are going to investigate the representation of and the relationship between the distant and the close‚ the local and the global‚ and the foreign and the exotic in the post-9/11 world‚ through an in-depth analysis of Salman Rushdie’s Shalimar the

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    Moor’s last Sigh’‚ we witness a reeling pageant of mad passions and dark secrets‚ deep crimes and high art‚ poignant innocence and cruel revenge‚ hopping in a careful‚ calculated manner across four generations of a rich and demented Indian family. Salman Rushdie’s cynical post-modernistic novel ‘The Moor’s Last Sigh’ laughs mischievously at the world and shivers from its evils. It is also‚ by analogy‚ one version of the history of India in the 20th century. Weaving a tale of murder and suicide‚ of

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    ethical imperative of reconciliation with the past. (Boehmer 221) The aim of the colonizers‚ since the establishment of empire‚ was to transform the others like themselves not physically but mentally as Lord Macaulay emphasized in his 1935 Minute. Salman Rushdie echoes the same feature in his latest novel The Enchantress of Florence: We will take your finest off-spring from you and we will transform

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    Lahore post office of February 24‚ 1930. This letter is also self-explanatory. ____________________________________________________________________________________1 Very urgent No. 103 Central Jail condemned cell‚ Lahore My Dear Sahar Gull Khan! We are missing the all we celebrate including hunting and lunch with you Kulbir and Kultaar Singh at your lands. Your gardens oranges were delicious. I hope you would have heard of our abandoning the fast after 16 days‚ and you can guess how greatly

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    In this tutorial I question the ideas of ‘language’ and ‘othering’‚ removing any preconceived notions from my mind‚ starting a fresh research and pondering process to form an opinion. I debate both sides of the coin‚ fully cognizant of the fact that it is more like a multi-faceted dice and that only two perceptions are not enough to discuss such an extensive issue. In Ghosh’s fiction‚ space is not merely remembered as an imaginative construct but is represented as a domain of political and cultural

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    POST COLONIALISM

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    Post colonialism should be referred to as the legacies of colonialism and not the end of colonialism. British interests in Indian languages arose from the necessity to cultivate the medium of intercourse between the government and its subjects. Lord Macaulay minute on Education 1835 very clearly signifies his agenda that is the Dissemination of the English language and English culture. The Englishmen wanted a class of persons who can act as interpreters between them and their subjects. People

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    ARAVIND ADIGA

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    Aravind Adiga is an Indian writer and journalist. His debut novel‚ The White Tiger‚ won the 2008 Man Booker Prize. He is the fourth Indian-born author to win the prize‚ after Salman Rushdie‚ Arundhati Roy and Kiran Desai. (V. S. Naipaul‚ another winner‚ is of Indian origin‚ but was not born in India.) He has written many short stories‚ essays‚ and published 3 books so far; namely‚ The White Tiger‚ Between the Assassinations‚ and Last Man in Tower. Be it essays or novels‚ the ‘Indian’ setting

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