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Definition: Rushdie, (Ahmed) Salman from Philip's Encyclopedia

British novelist, b. India. His early works, including the Booker Prize-winning Midnight's Children (1981), were eclipsed by Satanic Verses (1988). This novel incited the condemnation of Islamic extremists who perceived the book as blasphemy, and he was sentenced to death by Ayatollah Khomeini of Iran. In hiding, he wrote a number of works, including a children's book, Haroun and the Sea of Stories (1990) and the novel The Moor's Last Sigh (1995). In 1998 the Iranian government revoked the death sentence and Rushdie returned to public life.


Rushdie, Salman

From Wiley-Blackwell Encyclopedia of Literature: The Encyclopedia of Twentieth-Century Fiction
Salman Rushdie is one of the world's most conceptually and artistically ambitious writers of literary fiction. He is also a controversialist whose provocative forays into sensitive ideological battlegrounds have resulted in a contentious, and in the case of one novel incendiary, body of fiction. Politics, however, while it is crucial to Rushdie's artistry, is ultimately a secondary concern in his work, for though he has consistently used his fictions to interrogate political and cultural developments, Rushdie is first and foremost a storyteller whose fictions seek to entertain readers with their lush extravagances, their Rabelaisian comedy, their witty denunciations, their gothic depravities, their clever (sometimes overly clever) game playing, their grotesque caricatures, their hyperbolic narrative experiments, and their unfettered sense of the pleasures to be found in language and narration. To read Rushdie is, sometimes, to be overwhelmed – as many of his less sympathetic reviewers…
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Full text Article Rushdie, Salman (1947–)

From Encyclopedia of Islam and the Muslim World
© COLIN MCPHERSON/CORBIS...
Salman Rushdie is a novelist and critic who became a household name after his fictional work, The Satanic Verses , was protested by numerous Muslims and Muslim groups. Ayatollah Ruhollah Khomeini pronounced a fatwa (legal opinion) sentencing Rushdie to death, and as a result Rushdie was forced into…
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Full text Article Rushdie, Salman (1947-)

From Encyclopedia of Terrorism
Salman Rushdie is a well-known novelist who was condemned by the Iranian government for authoring and publishing his work Satanic Verses , which was declared to be blasphemous. Several months before his death, AYATOLLAH KHOMEINI issued a fatwa, or religious decree, advocating Rushdie's assassination…
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Full text Article Rushdie, Salman (1947–)

From The Oxford Companion to Fairy Tales
Indian-born novelist. Born in Bombay to a Muslim family, Rushdie was sent to school in England in 1961. After reading history at Cambridge, he spent some time as an advertising copywriter. His first novel, the allegorical Grimus (1975), already demonstrates two distinctive elements: the use of a…
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Full text Article Rushdie, (Ahmed) Salman (1947– )

From The Hutchinson Unabridged Encyclopedia with Atlas and Weather Guide
Indian-born British writer. He was born in India of a Muslim family. His book Midnight's Children (1981) deals with India from the date of independence and won the Booker Prize. His novel The Satanic Verses (1988) (the title refers to verses deleted from the Koran) offended many Muslims with alleged…
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Full text Article (Ahmed) Salman Rushdie (1947– )

From The Hutchinson Unabridged Encyclopedia with Atlas and Weather Guide
I have been waiting for 37 years, since the year I first came to this country, for Spurs to win the league again. It is a very hard fate to be a Spurs fan, but that is my fate. You can say that is the burden I now have to bear. On the Iranian government's withdrawal of financial support for the…
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Salman Rushdie in 1993.
Anglo-Indian novelist Salman Rushdie was condemned to death by leading Iranian Muslim clerics in 1989 for allegedly blaspheming Islam in his novel The Satanic Verses . His case became the focus of an international controversy. Ahmed Salman Rushdie was born on June 19, 1947, in Bombay (now Mumbai), …
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British novelist, born in Bombay. His works include Midnight’s Children (1981, Booker Prize), The Moor’s Last Sigh (1995) and Fury (2001) and Shalimar the Clown. His novel The Satanic Verses (1988) provoked Iran’s Ayatollah Khomeini to issue a fatwa against him (1989) forcing Rushdie to live in…
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Full text Article Rushdie, (Ahmad) Salman (1947 to )

From Chambers Dictionary of World History
British writer. Born in Bombay, India, of Muslim parents, he was educated there and in England, at Rugby and Cambridge. He became widely known after the publication of his second novel, Midnight's Children (1981). The Satanic Verses (1988) caused worldwide controversy because of its treatment of…
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Full text Article Salman Rushdie 1947– 

From The Oxford Dictionary of Quotations
Indian-born British novelist. On Rushdie: see khomeini ; see also advertising slogans Most of what matters in your life takes place in your absence. Midnight's Children (1981) bk. 1 To understand just one life, you have to swallow the world. Midnight's Children (1981) bk. 1 Every…
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