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Competing Fantasies and Alternative Realities: Salman Rushdie's the Golden House
Author(s)
Date Issued
2021-12-13
Date Available
2022-09-21T14:19:55Z
Abstract
This article examines one of the earliest novels of the Trump era, Salman Rushdie's The Golden House (2017), as part of a literary corpus that felt compelled to respond to the derealization of political culture by producing fictions commensurate to the new "American reality."Spanning the years from the first inauguration of Obama to the election of Trump, the novel depicts a nation that has "left reality behind and entered the comic-book universe,"a turn to fantasy that precedes the final irruption of a wealthy vulgarian who calls himself the Joker, and who subverts any previous sense of identity and of what is "real."Drawing from the notion of national fantasy as argued by Lauren Berlant (1991), Jacqueline Rose (1996), and Donald Pease (2009), the article suggests that Rushdie's novel performs and invites a rare self-examination in the context of early literary responses to the rise of Trumpism.
Sponsorship
European Commission Horizon 2020
Type of Material
Journal Article
Publisher
Cambridge University Press
Journal
Journal of American Studies
Start Page
1
End Page
25
Copyright (Published Version)
2021 The Authors
Subject – LCSH
Rushdie, Salman
Language
English
Status of Item
Peer reviewed
ISSN
0021-8758
This item is made available under a Creative Commons License
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PUBLISHED VERSION competing-fantasies-and-alternative-realities-salman-rushdies-the-golden-house.pdf
Size
375.5 KB
Format
Adobe PDF
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