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Full-Text Articles in Arts and Humanities
"Who Are You, Literally?": Fantasies Of The White Self In White Noise, Tim Engles
"Who Are You, Literally?": Fantasies Of The White Self In White Noise, Tim Engles
Tim Engles
No abstract provided.
Garbage Picking With Salman Rushdie, Tara Hubschmitt
Garbage Picking With Salman Rushdie, Tara Hubschmitt
Masters Theses
Salman Rushdie's voice is one of the most powerful in postmodern and post-colonial literature. He stands as a primary spokesman for the displaced personality of those caught between the conflicting influences of traditional cultures and the contemporary west. In Midnight's Children (1980), The Satanic Verses (1989), and The Ground Beneath Her Feet (1999), Rushdie appears to reveal himself as a proponent of a garbage aesthetic. The garbage metaphor, as explained by Ella Shohat and Robert Stam in Unthinking Eurocentricism (1994), develops from Brazilian filmmakers of the 1960s and is generally used to highlight the omnipresent influence of western culture upon …