Gabriel
Garcia Marquez’s 1967 One Hundred Years of Solitude is a masterpiece of world literature. Portraying the history of Columbia via a mode
of writing the world had seen very little of at the time, the fantastical
dimension of story achieved has effect to this day, and certainly will for
years to come. Though borrowing the
premise (presenting history via a fictional family who represent actual people)
and style (magic realist), Salman Rushdie’s 1980 Midnight’s Children is no less an achievement and a watershed event
in Indian publishing in the Western world.
On August
15, 1947 at midnight, India gained its independence from the British
throne. Not as glorious a moment as one
would imagine given the age of the country and the country’s desire for
autonomy, the civil and social strife which preceded India’s right to
self-government is no less dramatic than that which has followed. Civil war, secession, assassinations,
cultural divides, and strong religious enmity throwing the nation into chaos,
from government officials to conscientious objectors, the rich to the
destitute, few have gone unaffected. Midnight’s Children, while most often
presented in obtuse, indirectly satirical terms, recounts this window in India
and our world’s history.
The novel
opens with the birth of Saleem Sinai at midnight on the 15 th. A man with an exceptionally large nose able
to ‘sniff out’ matters in life, he starts the story by recalling his family’s
history, beginning with how his grandfather and grandmother met in the early
part of the 20 the century. A curious tale
involving a hole in a sheet and escalating to matriarchal proportions, it is
only a hint of things to come. Along
with others born just after midnight, Saleem has a special power: telepathy,
and through it he is able to communicate across the breadth of India with the
common man. His goal: discover the
cultural, linguistic, and historical elements which bind India together. Through waves of bizarreness coupled with
veiled reference to real world events, Saleem’s story slowly unfolds. Basket of
invisibility, snakes, spittoons—it is the innocuous elements of life Rushdie
spins to the surreal for his story.
Though Midnight’s Children is likewise written
in the mode of magic realism, Rushdie is by no means imitating the style of One Hundred Years of Solitude. Marquez’s tale is more visceral and
aesthetic, while Rushdie’s is more indirect and flighty; the fits and jumps of
fantastika are most often double-entendres, meaning the majority of content
must be read between the lines. There is
an airy, almost lackadaisical feel to the narrative—an interesting paradox
given the book is actually quite dense.
It must be picked and teased like a knotted shoelace, rather than untied
with a single tug. Meanings on top of
meanings, the novel possesses a versatility that rewards with patience.
But the greatest
difference in approach is the manner in which Rushdie draws in the entirety of
India, while Marquez limited his symbolism to a family and its immediate
surrounds. Saleem’s telepathic ability
eliminates distance as an obstacle while making him privy to the breadth of
Indian thought. From the mountains of
the north to the warm coastal waters, Sikhs to Muslims and government officials
to the poor, Saleem accesses the sub-continent mentally, and in turn so too
does the reader. Telepathy a risky plot
device (see Theodore Sturgeon’s More
Than Human for a cheesy deployment), Rushdie uses it to the best effect
possible: examination of a culture’s psyche.
Though
there had been successful Indian writers before (e.g. V.S. Naipul via
Trinidad), perhaps the greatest success of Midnight’s
Children (besides winning the Booker) is that it opened the doors and eyes
of the West to post-colonial writing coming from the East. A wash of Indian writers, each with their own
voice and style—Amitav Ghosh, Vikram Seth, Kiran Desai, Nayantara Sahgal,
Arundhati Roy, Aravind Adiga, Vikram Chandra, and others—have achieved
commercial and critical success in the aftermath of Rushdie’s novel. Placing the culture of India on the world
stage, they have described their homeland, for all its beauty and ugliness, to
give those who may not necessarily travel to the country a better look. Unashamedly incorporating Indian realities,
culture, and languages into their material, the reading world—and not only
English—has been enriched for it.
In the
end, Midnight’s Children is a superb
novel of multiple dimensions and myriad smells and flavors of the Indian
sub-continent. Rushdie utilizing many of the tricks and tools of post-modern
writing, the narrative is less straight-forward and more a multi-lateral
re-envisioning of modern Indian history, from the early to late 20th
century. A dense work that must be
tended and cogitated upon, the delicious imagery and spurts of the fantastic
motivate the plot.
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