Thinking Activity
Postcolonial Studies: Film Screening: Midnight's Children and The Reluctant Fundamentalist
Hello Readers!
We have had online film screening of the two films, " Midnight's children " directed by Deepa Mehta, base on novel written by Salman Rushdie and another is " The Reluctant Fundamentalist " directed by Mira Nair, base on a novel written by Muslim Hamid. So here our task is to give a film review with a perspective of the postcolonial studies, so let's see...
# Midnight's Children :
From one of the most acclaimed novel Midnight's Children by Salman Rushdie, emerges this drama Midnight's Children 2013 film highlighting the lives of two individuals born at the stroke of midnight when India achieved its independence from the British. The legendary yet dramatic Midnight's Children movie features a great story that marks it as an epic saga of the decade. This movie takes us through all the ages beginning from the grandparents to the grandchildren. Switched at the time of birth by a nurse at a Bombay hospital, the lives of the two individuals are mysteriously intertwined. As fate would have it, one (Saleem) is a son of a beggar woman whereas the other child (Shiva) becomes the destined son of a wealthy couple. Over a period of time, their fate makes them face each other on the field of rivalry, politics, romance and class.
# Midnight's Children as a ' Fragmented' allegory :
Salman Rushdie's Midnight's Children (1981), remains a central text in postcolonial literature. Rushdie's ambitious novel rejects the British colonial versions of India and constructs a 'new' world and a new depiction of Indian citizens and history in an attempt to provide greater truth to Indian images and history.
Midnight's Children follows Saleem Sinai, the novel's narrator, as he self-consciously explains his family history to the reader and to his listeners, Padma. While describing his grandfather and grandmother's personal history, Saleem intertwined Indian history within his narrative. This combination of his own familial history and Indian history culminates in the moment of his birth. Born at precisely midnight, August 15,1947, Saleem echoes the birth of an independent India, which gained it's independence from Great Britain at the same exact moment as Saleem's birth. In this moment, Saleem gains the ability to communicate with the other "midnight's children", those also born on the same day as Indian independence. The novel aligns Saleem's narrative to the narrative of a newly independent India, creating an allegorical reading of his character.
# Reluctant fundamentalist:
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