In this Book

Conspicuous Bodies: Provincial Belief and the Making of Joyce and Rushdie

Book
2014
summary
In Conspicuous Bodies: Provincial Belief and the Making of Joyce and Rushdie, Jean Kane re-examines the literature of James Joyce and Salman Rushdie from a post-secularist perspective, arguing that their respective religions hold critical importance in their works. Though Joyce and Rushdie were initially received as cosmopolitans, both authors subsequently reframed their public images and aligned themselves instead with a provincial religious identity, which emphasized the interconnections between religious devotion and embodiment. At the same time, both Joyce and Rushdie managed to resist the doctrinal content of their religions. Conspicuous Bodies presents Joyce as a founder and Rushdie as an inheritor of a distinctive discourse of belief about the importance of physical bodies and knowledge in religious practice. In doing so, it moves the reception of Joyce and Rushdie away from what previous critics have emphasized—away from questions of aesthetics and from a narrow understanding of belief—and instead questions the assumption that belief should be segregated from matters of physicality and knowledge. Kane reintroduces the concept of spiritual embodiment in order to expand our understanding of what counts as spiritual agency in non-western and minority literatures.

Table of Contents

Cover

Series Page, Title Page, Copyright Page, Deication

pp. i-vi

Table of Contents

pp. vii-viii

Acknowledgments

pp. ix-x

Introduction

pp. 1-7

1. Joyce's Conversion and the Counterdiscipline of Drink

pp. 8-40

2. The Canonization of Salman Rushdie: Mythic Midnight's Children and Hindu-Muslim Embodiment

pp. 41-68

3. Spirits Discipline Ulysses

pp. 69-96

4. Muslim Simulation and the Limits of the "Star Text"

pp. 97-119

5. Embodied Panic: Modernist "Religion" in the Controversies over Ulysses and The Satanic Verses

pp. 120-140

6. The Religion of Celebrity

pp. 141-158

Notes

pp. 159-183

Bibliography

pp. 184-200

Index

pp. 201-210

Other Titles in the Series

pp. 211-211

Back Cover

Back To Top