Exploring magical realism and postmodernism in Salman Rushdie’s Victory City
Abstract
Victory City takes readers to a fascinating adventure into the past of one of India’s prosperous
cities, Vijayanagar. In Salman Rushdie’s alternative storytelling of the history of the city, the
central focus is put on one Pampa Kampana blessed with divine power. Recounting the
magical rise of the city and its inevitable decline, the novel problematizes historical
representation. This paper evaluates the novel as a historiographic metafiction and examines
its magical realist and postmodernist elements. Through close textual analysis, the study
highlights the sceptical inscription of historical representation, the conflicted depiction of
metanarratives and ideologies, the use of self reflexivity, narrative plurality, and
intertextuality in order to establish its postmodernist stance. Similarly, the portrayal of realism
juxtaposed with the magical, and the fluctuating development of the magical and the real
within the narration are also analysed to comprehend its magical realist features. The
intersection of magical realism and postmodernism in the novel depicts that history is
challenged and re-casted through the scepticism propelled at the normativity of realism and
the acceptance of the unfamiliarity of the magical.
Keywords
Historiographic metafiction; Magical realism; Postmodernism; Alternate history; Self reflexivityLC Subject Headings
Magic realism (Literature).; Postmodernism.; Alternative histories (Fiction)--History and criticism.Description
This thesis is submitted in partial fulfillment of the requirements for the degree of Master of Arts in English, 2024.Department
Department of English and Humanities, BRAC UniversityType
ThesisCollections
- Thesis, M.A. (English) [138]