Limit search to available items
Streaming video

Title Salman Rushdie : between the devil and the deep blue sea / produced by Mark Walsh and Detlef Siebert
Published New York, NY : Filmakers Library, 1998

Copies

Description 1 online resource (43 min.)
Series Filmakers Library online
Summary This eloquent film on Salman Rushdie brings into sharp focus the conflict between freedom of expression and religious conservatism. The film opens with a short reading by Rushdie in his richly modulated voice from Haroun and the Sea, a book he wrote for his son a year after after he went into hiding. The film goes on to show the bookburnings and protests that Satanic Verses provoked thoughout Moslem communities all over the world, but most shockingly in Bradford, England. Bradford is the Islamic capital of England. There are forty mosques and many Koranic schools. Many of its inhabitants support the fatwa of Ayotollah Komeini and express their disgust at the book. Rushdie reminds us that books do not injure people; one can always close a book if it offends. In response to being labeled blasphemous, he says "this is a crude, fascist term to shut people up." At a conference on censorship, secrecy and democracy, author Gunther Grass says "no one should claim a monopoly on the truth."
Audience For High School; College; Adult audiences
Notes English
Middle East Studies Association, 1997
Print version record
Subject Rushdie, Salman. Satanic verses.
Rushdie, Salman -- Censorship
SUBJECT Rushdie, Salman fast
Satanic verses (Rushdie, Salman) fast
Subject Freedom of the press -- History -- 20th century
Islam and literature.
Censorship
Freedom of the press
Islam and literature
Genre/Form Documentary
History
Documentary.
Form Streaming video
Author Siebert, Detlef
Walsh, Mark