"Salman Khan" Essays and Research Papers

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    Extempore Topics

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    6.) ’Govinda aala re’ (name govinda) 7.) "Roll up you sleeves" (phrase from my SOP) 8.) Household male 9.) Namesake(Random) 10.) One In Hand Two In Bush (Cos I got placement offers from 2 companies) 11.) Rouble (was on Russian project) 12.) Salman Rushdie (had questions about his books in the interview) 13.) Slumdog Millionaire 14.) The properties of sun 15.) To win a rat race you need to be a cat 16.) everyone cannot be a moon(my surname) 17.) Hope 18.) India United and india divided

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    Diaspora Literature Essay

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    Diaspora Literature - A Testimony of Realism By Shaleen Singh Diaspora Literature involves an idea of a homeland‚ a place from where the displacement occurs and narratives of harsh journeys undertaken on account of economic compulsions. Basically Diaspora is a minority community living in exile. The Oxford English Dictionary 1989 Edition (second) traces the etymology of the word ’Diaspora’ back to its Greek root and to its appearance in the Old Testament (Deut: 28:25) as such it references. God’s

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    Midnight's Children

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    Salman Rushdie’s novel Midnight’s Children employs strategies which engage in an exploration of History‚ Nationalism and Hybridity. This essay will examine three passages from the novel which demonstrate these issues. Furthermore‚ it will explore why each passage is a good demonstration of these issues‚ how these issues apply to India in the novel‚ and how the novel critiques these concepts. The passage from pages 37-38 effectively demonstrates the concept of history‚ as it foregrounds elements

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    20060073 Kim Jae-hee 2013-05-13 Where the meaning lie -In Salman Rushdie’s ‘The Prophet’s Hair’ With a start of a mock-fairy tales or Arabian Night narrator‚ the prophet’s hair varies its meaning through the story. The prophet’s hair‚ which comes out its meaning from the Islamic myth‚ loses its religious meaning and gets secular implication. It is important to note that where it is placed‚ its meaning is changed. Therefore it can be said that the one signifier has various signified and its

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    light‚ as it surely is in the final thirty or so pages. When it drags‚ stylistic tics become annoyingly apparent‚ the narrative too slender to support even a novel this short‚ and this talented author’s indebtedness to other writers‚ from Narayan and Salman Rushdie to Italo Calvino‚ Jerzy Kosinski and Gabriel Garcia Marquez the sign not of postmodern play but of youthful

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    A prominent Indian-British author who was brought up in a Muslim family and has Muslim background wrote The Satanic Verses. Salman Rushdie‚ the author‚ was the unofficially caused the setting off of incidents that included bookstore bombings‚ book bans and burnings‚ and blasphemy accusations due to the controversial publication of The Satanic Verses. The real downfall is when the Ayatollah Khomeini‚ the leader of the Iranian government‚ issued a fatwa ordering Rushdie’s death due to the insult of

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    Sanders and Rushdie Paper

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    “Americans are likely to share Rushdie’s enthusiasm for migration‚ for the ‘hybridity’ and the transformation that comes of new and expected combination of human beings and cultures.” (27-31) Scott Russell Sanders does not agree with Salman Rushdie nor does he see the positives in migrating to a new place. He develops his views by showing how society has pushes migration all throughout history and explains all the potential harm that could come to environments and species. Sanders also takes the

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    Topics

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    6.) ’Govinda aala re’ (name govinda) 7.) "Roll up you sleeves" (phrase from my SOP) 8.) Household male 9.) Namesake(Random) 10.) One In Hand Two In Bush (Cos I got placement offers from 2 companies) 11.) Rouble (was on Russian project) 12.) Salman Rushdie (had questions about his books in the interview) 13.) Slumdog Millionaire 14.) The properties of sun 15.) To win a rat race you need to be a cat 16.) everyone cannot be a moon(my surname) 17.) Hope 18.) India United and india divided

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    Midnight's Children Essay

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    Midnight’s Children essay Salman Rushdie’s creation‚ Saleem Sinai‚ has a self-proclaimed "overpowering desire for form" (363). In writing his own autobiography Saleem seems to be after what Frank Kermode says every writer is a after: concordance. Concordance would allow Saleem to bring meaning to moments in the "middest" by elucidating (or creating) their coherence with moments in the past and future. While Kermode talks about providing this order primarily through an "imaginatively predicted

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    The Remains of the Day

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    -post-colonial novel- Postcolonialism‚ discussed from a literary approach‚ deals with the literature produced in countries that were colonies and by the colonized peoples responding to the colonial legacy by what the British-Indian writer Salman Rushdie called “writing back”‚ and thus confronting colonial cultural attitudes through literature. However‚ it may also refer to the literature written in other countries‚ which takes as its subject-matter the idea or experience of colonialism.

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