Midnight's Children
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Midnight's Children
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3 journalers for this copy...
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The following are some notes I made while reading Midnight's Children, in an effort to keep track of Saleem's ancestry, the mystery around his birth, and the historical events covered in Midnight's Children. |
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Protagonist Saleem Sinai is one of 'midnight's children', "mysteriously handcuffed to history" by being born on August 15, 1947, India's first day of independence (author Rushdie was himself born in Bombay the same year). The novel begins in 1978 when Saleem is 31, but flashes back immediately to the story of Saleem's Muslim grandfather, Dr. Aadam Aziz (born in Srinagar, Kashmir), a German-trained physician who -- following his marriage in Kashmir to the wealthy Naseem Ghani -- takes up residence and a medical practice in the city of Agra. There he lives with Naseem -- who for her humourless piety comes to be known as the "Reverend Mother" -- raising Saleem's mother and his four aunts and uncles: Alia, Mumtaz (who first marries Nadir Khan of the anti-partition "Free Islam Convocation"), Hanif (later a successful film director in Bombay), Mustapha (later a stuffy civil servant) and Emerald (who marries the pro-partition Major Zulfikar). The question of Saleem's parentage is kept deliberately mysterious throughout Book I. In the fourth chapter ("Under the Carpet"), we learn that Saleem's mother is Mumtaz Aziz, who -- following her divorce from Nadir Khan -- married Ahmed Sinai and changed her own name to Amina Sinai. But just as that mystery is resolved, another is revealed. In 1947, as the British are preparing to leave India, Ahmed and Amina purchase the estate of departing colonial, William Methwold. Among their new neighbours are Methwold's servants, the jester and musician "Wee Willie Winkie" (whose real name is unknown) and his wife Vanita, who -- like the Sinais -- are expecting a baby. At midnight on August 15, both Amina Sinai and Vanita give birth to sons. Vanita dies during childbirth, and the midwife Mary Pereira -- wishing to please her radical boyfriend -- switches the two babies, condemning the son of wealthy parents to a life of poverty and vice versa. (Photo: Bombay, August 15, 1947) |
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Book II begins in 1948, the first year of Saleem's life, with the assassination of Mahatma Gandhi by Nathuram Godse, a Hindu angry with Gandhi's efforts to reconcile Hindus and Muslims. Saleem grows up quickly in the first several chapters of Book II (among other things, this is when he first learns of his mother's ongoing association with Nadir Khan, now a leader of the Indian Communist Party), and it is in 1957, just after he turns ten years old, that he fully realizes the implications of his date of birth. In "All-India Radio", Saleem discovers his ability to tune into the inner thoughts of his family members, classmates, and friends -- and to those of people farther afield. In "My Tenth Birthday", he places this gift into context: Saleem explains that 1,001 children came into the world between midnight and 1 a.m. on August 15th, 1947, each with an unusual ability (the closer to midnight the child's birth, the more miraculous his ability). Two of "midnight's children", Saleem and Shiva -- Vanita's baby with whom he was switched at birth -- were born on the exact stroke of midnight, and are thereby designated as leaders of the "Midnight's Children Conference" (MCC). Shiva has been given great skill in warfare, while Saleem has received insight into others' hearts and minds. From their first telepathic meeting, during which Shiva threatens to take control over the MCC, Shiva and Saleem become rivals. The last part of Book II covers the period of the wars between India and Pakistan. This is also a period of great devastation for Saleem's family: his Uncle Hanif (the Bombay film director) commits suicide, and his grandfather Aadam Aziz dies at the temple of Sankara Acharya. In the aftermath of these deaths, Saleem's family move to Pakistan, where they are decimated by the 1965 Indo-Pakistan war. Book II concludes with a final glimpse into the future: "six years later ... there was another war". |
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As Book III begins, it is 1971 and Saleem has become both a citizen of Pakistan and a member of the Pakistani army. He is known as "the buddha" (old man) -- old before his time. Saleem can't remember anything about his past, though he is still carrying his grandparents' silver spittoon. His role in the army is as a "man-dog" -- a tracker who has become famous for being able to scent enemy armaments and the emotions of others. Saleem's colleagues gossip shamelessly about the mystery of his past. Flown into Dacca in March 1971, Saleem -- he later confesses to Padma -- was personally responsible for leading Pakistani troops to the lair of Sheikh Mujib-ur-Rahman. He describes how he and the other soldiers "watched in silence as our boys ... held Pakistan together by turning flame-throwers machine-guns hand-grenades on the city slums" (p. 357) (a description of the 1971 genocide in Bangladesh). Saleem and three companions flee from wartorn Dacca in a daze, moving southward until they enter The Sundarbans, a mangrove forest in East Pakistan/Bangladesh. There they experience a number of magical occurrences, and Saleem gets bitten in the heel by a serpent, causing him to remember everything from his past except his name. |
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Midnight's Children was the winner of the 1981 Booker Prize (twelve years later, on the occasion of the Booker's 25th anniversary, it was also declared the "Booker of Bookers" -- the best of all previous winners -- by a panel of three former judges). In 2003 the book was produced as a stage play by the Royal Shakespeare Company, and in the same year was the subject of a month-long Humanities festival at Columbia University. Midnight's Children has been the subject of numerous academic papers, some samples of which are available online:
Other novels set in Bombay during the same era as Midnight's Children: Rohinton Mistry's 1996 A Fine Balance (which covers some of the same painful 1970s history); and Manil Suri's 2001 The Death of Vishnu. |
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