Salman Rushdie’s Midnight’s Children presents a deeply engaging fictional account of India in the years following the end of British colonial rule. By linking the national history of independence, Partition, and political unrest with the personal life of Saleem Sinai, the novel shows how large historical events directly shape individual destinies. This paper examines how Rushdie represents postcolonial India through memory, symbolism, and narrative experimentation. It focuses on the relationship between public history and private experience, the lingering effects of colonialism, and the gradual breakdown of unity in a nation defined by diversity. Ultimately, the paper argues that Midnight’s Children is both a political critique and a deeply human story that mourns loss while still holding on to the possibility of renewal.
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Saraswati Dental College and Hospital
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Ms.Sucheta Niraj Patil (Wed,) studied this question.