At the height of the Rushdie Affair, mosques in England were targeted specifically by neo-fascist thugs, who had also started to hurl “Muslim” as an epithet at immigrants. Yet the Left had no need of the category of Islamophobia to make sense of those events. It was well-understood that the right always acts opportunistically. The issue then is what has the Left either won or lost by applying the rubric of Islamophobia to contemporary events? Tariq Ali tried to explain in an article titled “Islamophobia Exposed” that “Islamophobia is something that has been artificially engendered, especially in the Western world, against what is regarded as the new enemy.” [72] On this view, paradoxically, Islamophobia is not an irrational hatred of someone because of their religion, but an ideology that can be turned on and off like a switch by western imperialists. Such a claim makes Ali a useful idiot for the fundamentalists insofar as, from the outset, he concedes to the conservative Islamist view. Indeed, when radicalized Muslims in Britain attack non-Muslims they do so to rally Muslims behind them, splitting the entire world into the faithful and the non-believers. The use of the category “Islamophobia” readily advances this claim on behalf of the terrorists who recycle vague cliches about Islam and West. It should be obvious, but is probably still worth pointing out, that Muslims come in all (ethnic) stripes and colors (races); there is no form of racism capacious enough to cover such a broad swathe. The category of Islamophobia is slippery. Has there been an actual demonization of those of a certain religious background or those with fervent anti-secular views? Why should someone from the Middle East or South Asia be mobilized around their identity as Muslims, rather than politically, on the basis of fighting for their liberal rights against racism? And why should the Left abandon the tenents of secular society or concede that secularism is a Eurocentric or western value? Does the Left care to overcome ascriptive identities or to embrace them? The Left neither needs to defend Islam as a religion nor Islamic fundamentalism politically, beyond supporting the elementary defense of the civil rights of individuals, families, and communities, which of course includes freedom of religion.
Without going over to the side of the “new atheists,” such as Richard Dawkins and the late Christopher Hitchens, who polemically argue that religion as such is an issue, why should any leftist hesitate to critique religious extremism and theocratic states? The Marxist Left, Rosa Luxemburg clarified in 1905, “in no way fights against religious beliefs. On the contrary, it demands complete freedom of conscience for every individual and the widest conceivable toleration for every faith and every opinion.” [73] Yet, in pressing her case, she was not reinterpreting the Marxist critique of religion, but rather pressing the insight found in “On the Jewish Question” that the essence of religion is transformed when it is turned into a purely private affair, and that accomplishing this would be an achievement for both religion and politics. The historical Left thus fought to maintain the liberal achievement of separating church and state. While Luxemburg was arguing that that socialism would transfigure the importance of religion, Hassan Mahamdaille of the SWP perversely contends the opposite: that by self-identifying as Muslim, the anti-Rushdie campaigners came to be not only self-confident but filled with a sense that Muslims could join others to oppose Islamophobia “but also war and other injustice.” [74] Or, in short, self-identifying as Muslim is tantamount to joining the fight for socialism.
A voracious reader, Rushdie once remarked to a room full of other writers that a book is not justified by the worthiness of its author, but the quality of what has been written. [75] The facile critiques against him therefore have always taken the form of aesthetic verdicts: The Satanic Verses is bad fiction, a poorly written tale, a self-indulgent exercise. [76] Such criticisms (even if valid) were only ever a mask to hide behind. Though those on the Left can cozen themselves (in their view the worthiness of Rushdie was always tied to parsing whether, or to what degree, he himself was a leftist), the quality of what he wrote simply was not a factor. Gareth Jenkins of the SWP proudly remembers what it was like once to “interview a novelist whose works were imbued with anti-racism and mockery of imperialism and class prejudice.” After he read the robust defense of liberal values and the Enlightenment in Joseph Anton, Jenkins concluded that “the Rushdie who sided with the oppressed in 1989 does not appear in the Rushdie of the memoir. And that is a tragedy for all of us.” However, so as not to be appear boorish, Jenkins tried to interject some artful nuance into his review by positing that the offense of The Satanic Verses amounts to novelistic irreverence is incomparable to the “gratuitous[ly] racist ‘offense’” of the 2005 Danish and 2012 French “anti-Mohammed cartoons.” [77] The implication, since repeated without reflection, is that Rushdie was someone who, like his close and steadfast friend Christopher Hitchens, had shifted rightward, [78] when in fact it is the Left that had abandoned its erstwhile commitments to freedom in favor of mawkish appeals to relativism and a new tribalism. [79] After the fatwa, conservatives of all stripes rallied against the book by deploring its author as a heretical scribbler; nowadays, it is the Left that objects to the book by portraying its author as an apostate leftist. As it was for the mullahs, so it is today for many leftists: The sin of apostasy is not to be forgiven—and culpability is established merely by accusation.
Conclusion
The ire of the Left always flummoxed Salman Rushdie who saw himself as a soixante-huitard. Although painfully aware of attacks from the Left, especially from other left-liberal writers, Rushdie was at odds to explain them. From the outset of the “affair,” he was genuinely astonished that, “in spite of a lifetime of anticolonialism [he had been] transformed into an oppressor.” Indeed, it was Fatima Meer, a well-known anti-apartheid campaigner, who was among the first to attack the author, arguing that his invitation to address the Congress of South African Writers in the autumn of 1988 should be rescinded since “in the final analysis it is the Third World that Rushdie attacks.” [80] When the leftist cultural critic Paul Gilroy, author of the classic work of post-colonial theory There Ain’t no Black in the Union Jack, implied that Rushdie had invited tragedy by misjudging the reaction of millions of Muslims, the author was left almost speechless by how quickly the tide had turned. “As depressing as the Islamic campaign,” he later remarked, “were the attacks from the left.” [81] Later, in the autumn of 1993, shortly after the head of the publishing company responsible for the Norwegian edition of The Satanic Verses, was shot in Oslo, an ominous letter from a “D. Ali of the ‘Manchester Socialist Workers Party and Anti-Racist League’” cautioned the author that there were like-minded members everywhere from Liverpool to Bradford, and all across London, ready to kill the author for Allah. [82] For a certain kind of leftist, to stand against Rushdie and on the side of the Muslim extremists was ipso facto an anti-imperialist stance. From the standpoint of Old Left, as Christopher Hitchens noted in 1989, it was also more than a little ironic that, in an era in which the Afghan mujahidin was in lock step with the imperialist West, the Rushdie Affair would lead a number of liberals and leftists to identify Islam, “with the cry of the oppressed and with anti-imperialism.” [83] Added to this, in a final twist, was the fact that Rushdie in substantial measure shared the nationalist Third-Worldist views of his leftist critics who conflated socialism with anti-Westernism. The West, Rushdie once wrote, had failed to deliver progress and therefore “lost the future.” Of course this was the same Rushdie who had written a glowing account of the Sandinistas and the like. [84] The bind for Rushdie was that, although he himself was an “anti-imperialist” and “anti-racist” who believed the sorts of curbs on freedom of expression found in the British Race Relations Act were well-founded, [85] he still had a liberal allergy to cultural relativism and explicit calls for censorship. [86]
If the established Left failed to adequately address racism in Britain before the Rushdie Affair, its embrace of the rhetoric of multiculturalism and Islamophobia, has only further weakened its ability to do so. The apparent intractability of race in the present day might be best understood as a symptomatic expression of regression, rather than advance, in (and through) social political progress. The elaborate legal structure of segregation and discrimination has long collapsed. Ever since the 1960s, Britain has witnessed the decline of legal segregation, but also the simultaneous rise of a new kind of de facto segregation, such as separate religious schools, ethnic constituencies, and isolated neighborhoods, measures enacted in the name of multiculturalism. The policy of multiculturalism may have made sense to Labour and the Tories in the era of violent street clashes between the National Front and the AYM, especially against the backdrop of the prolonged economic crisis of the 1970s, but it has by now shown itself to be altogether chimerical as a means of grappling with racism. Multiculturalism was in this sense exemplary of the rise and fall of neoliberalism, nostalgia for which was especially evident in the 2015 campaign of Jeremy Corbyn, whose stint as the leader of Labour supposedly marked a return to “socialism.” Corbyn was of course committed to the idea of Britain as a multicultural community of communities and the remnants of the Left in Britain threw their support behind his campaign, at least until it was racked by controversies over anti-Semitism, in which one could detect the faint echoes of the undigested legacy of the Rushdie Affair. Unwittingly, multiculturalism has contributed to the rise of new fundamentalisms that are modern and metropolitan. The origins of the anti-Rushdie campaign owe more to the collapse and transformation of the Left, in Britain as well as globally, than to religious tradition or fundamentalist ideas that were imported from the ex-colonies. If nationalism revealed the failure of socialism after World War I, the new tribalism evident everywhere, since the Rushdie Affair, expresses the failure of capitalism in our own era.
The Rushdie Affair was a late manifestation of the crisis of the New Left. And the failure to digest the history of Rushdie Affair has meant that contemporary Left is fated to a form of repetition compulsion. “The exhortation to submit to events,” Rushdie once remarked, “is an essentially conservative one.” [87] Though Rushdie intended the statement as a critique of authors who sought to remain apolitical, or “inside the whale,” his description better suits the contemporary Left, which is hesitant, or possibly unable, to defend the freedom of speech once considered vital by the Left. Much less could leftists today offer a dialectical critique of liberalism; instead, the Left celebrates illiberal and reactionary views as forms of “resistance.” With civil rights generally, but the freedom of speech particularly, under assault from all sides, the contemporary Left may well get what it has wished for: an end to the freedoms it neither uses nor even seems to want.
[1] Peter Martagh, ?Rushdie in Hiding after Ayatollah?s Death Threat,? Guardian, February 15, 1989, https://www.theguardian.com/books/1989/feb/15/salmanrushdie.
[2] BBC World Broadcast, February 24, 1989, in Lisa Appignanesi and Sarah Maitland (eds.), The Rushdie File, (Syracuse: Syracuse University Press, 1990), 75.
[3] Salman Rushdie, The Satanic Verses, (London: Viking, 1988), 205.
[4] Martin Amis, “Rendezvous with Rushdie,” Vanity Fair, December 1990, 162.
[5] Hamid Dabashi, ?The Salman Rushdie Affair: Thirty Years and a Novelist Later,? Al Jazeera, February 19, 2019, https://www.aljazeera.com/amp/opinions/2019/2/19/the-salman-rushdie-affair-thirty-years-and-a-novelist-later.
[6] Chelsia Rose Marcius, Tracey Tully and Ana Facio-Krajcer, ??I?m Done With Him?: A Mother?s Anger Over Rushdie Attack,? New York Times, August 17, 2022, https://www.nytimes.com/2022/08/17/nyregion/salman-rushdie-stabbing-suspect.html.
[7] Ben Ashford, Dailymail.com, August 14, 2022, https://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-11110905/Mother-alleged-Salman-Rushdie-attacker-says-son-responsible-actions.html. The Daily Mail story was recirculated by other news agencies.
[8] Steven Vago and Ben Kesslen, ?Salman Rushdie Attacker Praises Iran?s Ayatollah, Surprised Author Survived: Jailhouse Interview,? New York Post, August 17, 2022, https://nypost.com/2022/08/17/alleged-salman-rushdie-attacker-didnt-think-author-would-survive/.
[9] Guillermo Altares, ?Andrew Wylie, ?The Jackal? of Books,? El Pais, October 22, 2022, https://english.elpais.com/culture/2022-10-22/andrew-wylie-the-jackal-of-books-amazon-is-like-isis-it-takes-no-prisoners.html.
[10] An excerpt from the novel, ?A Sackful of Seeds,? appeared in the New Yorker, December 12, 2022, https://www.newyorker.com/magazine/2022/12/12/a-sackful-of-seeds.
[11] Christopher Hitchens, ?Siding with Rushdie,? London Review of Books, Vol. 11, No. 20, October 26, 1989.
[12] Kenan Malik, From Fatwa to Jihad: The Rushdie Affair and its Legacy, (London: Atlantic Books, 2009), 145.
[13] Mick Hume and Brendan O?Neill, ?Where is the ?Je suis Salman? Movement?? The Brendan O?Neill Show, August 18, 2022, https://www.spiked-online.com/podcast-episode/where-is-the-je-suis-salman-movement/.
[14] Jake Kettridge, ?Why The Satanic Verses Would Bever be Published Today,? Telegraph, August 15, 2022, https://www.telegraph.co.uk/books/what-to-read/salman-rushdie-satanic-verses-published-today/.
[15] Slavoj Žižek, “Islamic Fascism and the Failure of the Left,” New Statesman, January 16-25, 2015, 14-15.
[16] The move to halt the importation of the book was an empty threat of sorts, since, in the absence of a cheaply available Indian edition, imported, hardback copies ofThe Satanic Verses were prohibitively expensive. The representatives of Penguin India had tabled the idea of publishing an Indian edition of The Satanic Verses after an unfavorable reader review by writer Khushwant Singh. Rushdie recounts the episode in Joseph Anton (New York: Random House, 2012), 113. Khushwant Singh offers his version of events in the BBC documentary, The Satanic Verses Affair (2009), directed by Janice Sutherland, https://youtu.be/ilbNgCWgnwE.
[17] Rushdie himself made use of the libel courts in 2008 to suppress a tell-all book by an ex-bodyguard. Helene Goldberg, ?The Shame of Salman Rushdie?s Secular Fatwa,? Spiked, August 27, 2008. https://www.spiked-online.com/2008/08/27/the-shame-of-salman-rushdies-secular-fatwa/
[18] Rushdie, The Satanic Verses, 52, 56.
[19] Rushdie, ?India Bans a Book for its own Good,? New York Times, October 19, 1988.
[20] Rushdie, Joseph Anton, 117.
[21] GPD, ?Blackmail Works,? Economic and Political Weekly, vol. 23, no. 43, October 22, 1988, 2199.
[22] Syed Shahabuddin, “You did this with Satanic Forethought, Mr. Rushdie,” in The Rushdie File, 37.
[23] Tim Black, ?The Fatwa and the Birth of Muslim Identity Politics,? Spiked, August 22, 2022, https://www.spiked-online.com/2022/08/21/the-fatwa-and-the-birth-of-muslim-identity-politics/.
[24] Mary Ann Weaver, ?The Novelist and the Sheikh,? New Yorker, January 30, 1995.
[25] See Tariq Ali, ?It didn?t need to be done,? London Review of Books, Vol. 37, No. 3, February 5, 2015.
[26] Johnathan C. Randal, ?Rushdies?s Book Burned in Britain,? Washington Post, January 18, 1989.
[27] See Salman Rushdie, ?The Book Burning,? New York Review of Books, vol. XXXVI, no. 3, March 2, 1989; also see the comments on Kinnock in Joseph Anton, 180.
[28] Matt Cooper, ?Thirty Years since The Satanic Verses,? August 8, 2022, originally run in 2018, https://www.workersliberty.org/story/2022-08-08/thirty-years-satanic-verses.
[29] Rushdie, “Charter 88,” in Imaginary Homelands (London: Granta Books, [1988] 1991), 164; also, Joseph Anton, 131.
[30] Rushdie, Joseph Anton, 145.
[31] Tariq Ali, “Smoked Salman’s Fishy Flavour,” Literary Review, March 1991: 12-13.
[32] Eric Malling, Salman Rushdie, The Fifth Estate, March 7, 1989, https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=bchuQDVU2RQ&t=13s.
[24] Mary Ann Weaver, ?The Novelist and the Sheikh,? New Yorker, January 30, 1995.
[25] See Tariq Ali, ?It didn?t need to be done,? London Review of Books, Vol. 37, No. 3, February 5, 2015.
[26] Johnathan C. Randal, ?Rushdies?s Book Burned in Britain,? Washington Post, January 18, 1989.
[27] See Salman Rushdie, ?The Book Burning,? New York Review of Books, vol. XXXVI, no. 3, March 2, 1989; also see the comments on Kinnock in Joseph Anton, 180.
[28] Matt Cooper, ?Thirty Years since The Satanic Verses,? August 8, 2022, originally run in 2018, https://www.workersliberty.org/story/2022-08-08/thirty-years-satanic-verses.
[29] Rushdie, “Charter 88,” in Imaginary Homelands (London: Granta Books, [1988] 1991), 164; also, Joseph Anton, 131.
[30] Rushdie, Joseph Anton, 145.
[31] Tariq Ali, “Smoked Salman’s Fishy Flavour,” Literary Review, March 1991: 12-13.
[32] Eric Malling, Salman Rushdie, The Fifth Estate, March 7, 1989, https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=bchuQDVU2RQ&t=13s.
[33] Later, in the 1990s, the Japanese translator of The Satanic Verses was killed and would-be assassins targeted the Italian translator and the head of a publishing outfit in Oslo linked to book.
[34] The Satanic Verses Affair (2009), directed by Janice Sutherland, https://youtu.be/ilbNgCWgnwE. Also see https://www.gettyimages.com/detail/video/muslem-anti-rushdie-demonstrations-a-england-london-hyde-news-footage/812697508?adppopup=true
[35] Hanif Kursehi addresses this in his fictionalized account of the Rushdie Affair in his novel The Black Album (Lonon: Farber and Farber, 1995).
[36] Malik, From Fatwa to Jihad, xxi.
[37] Ibid., 95.
[38] Ibid., 22.
[39] While some critics, such as Homi Bhabha celebrated Rushdie as giving voice to the concerns of cultural hybridity, alterity, and translation, others such as Aijaz Ahmed were critical of Rushdie, see Bhabha, “The Power of the Text,” Artforum International, vol. 27, no. 9, May 1989, and Ahmed, “Salman Rushdie’s Shame: Postmodern Migrancy and Representation of Women, in In Theory (London: Verso, 1992).
[40] Well before the tragedy of Grenfell Tower in 2017, Rushdie wrote of the squalid conditions, rife with fire hazards in which migrants were housed by Camden Council. See “An Unimportant Fire,” in Imaginary Homelands, 139 – 142.
[41] Rushdie, Imaginary Homelands, 130 – 131.
[42] Ibid., 138.
[43] Rushdie, Imaginary Homelands, 137.
[44] BA Hepple, “The British Race Relations Acts, 1965 and 1968,” The University of Toronto Law Journal, Vol. 19, No. 2, Spring, 1969: 257
[45] Roy Jenkins and Anthony Lester (Eds.), Essays and Speeches by Roy Jenkins (London: Collins, 1967), 267.
[46] Malik, From Fatwa to Jihad, 59.
[47] Ibid., 76.
[48] Ibid., 57.
[49] Ibid., 59.
[50] Ibid.
[51] Ibid., 63.
[52] James and the Trotskyists originally took an integrationist stance, whereas the official American Communist Party continued pushing their “Black Belt” thesis of the 1930s, the view that black citizens formed an oppressed nationality within the United States that had to be liberated. The view that the struggle for socialism was distinct from the fight against racism was thus a well-established view on the Stalinist Left, when it was taken up by radicals in the Civil Rights Movement in the late-1960s, under the slogan of Black Power; as was the idea that fight against racism was akin to struggles for national liberation and anti-imperialism. See Max Shachtman, Race and Revolution [originally titled Communism and the Negro], (London: Verso, 2003 [1933]).
[53] Lenin quoted by CLR James, “Black Power,” https://www.marxists.org/archive/james-clr/works/1967/black-power.htm.
[54] John Rose, “The Southall Asian Youth Movement,” Notes of the Month, no. 91, September 1976: 5-6, https://www.marxists.org/history/etol/newspape/isj/1976/no091/rose.htm. For more attempts by the International Socialists to reach South Asian workers in Britain see their Punjabi and Urdu newspaper Chingari and the tract The Black Worker (1977).
[55] The history of the IWA is recounted in the 2016 film Indian Workers’ Association, directed by Sav Kyriacou & Matthew Rosenberg, https://youtu.be/BHMwMkUIlSE. On the rise of the AYM, see Malik, From Fatwa to Jihad, Chapter 2, “From Street-fighters to Book-burners.”
[56] The party recounts its own background and fight against the National Front on its website, https://socialistworker.co.uk/swp-brief-history/.
[57] Talat Ahmed, Avtar Singh Jouhl, Rahul Patel, “Lessons in Division,” Socialist Worker Review, no. 119 (April, 1989): 12 – 13.
[58] See Marx’s comments in 1871 to the IWMA.
[59] Chris Myant, Morning Star, 25 June 1982 quoted in Ihab Shabana, ?From an Understanding to a Securitizing Discourse: The British Left?s Encounter with the Emergence of Political Islam, 1978?2001,? Religions, no. 13 (2022): 206.
[60] Tony Coughlin, ?Labour, Rushdie, and Separate Education,? The Leninist, August 23, 1989, https://www.marxists.org/history/international/comintern/sections/britain/periodicals/the-leninist/index.htm.
[61] Ibid.
[62] See Yasmin Alibhai, “A Member no More,” Marxism Today, December, 1989, and Jeffery Weeks, “Value for Many,” Marxism Today, December, 1989, 13, https://banmarchive.org.uk/marxism-today/december-1989/.
[63] Rahul Patel, “A Burning Issue,” Socialist Worker Review, no. 117, February, 1989, 24-45.
[64] Gareth Jenkins, “The Devil’s Prose?” Socialist Worker Review, no. 118, March, 1989, 15.
[65] Alex Callinicos, “In a Heartless World,” Socialist Worker Review, no. 119, April, 1989, 14-15.
[66] “Rushdie: Defend the Right to be Offensive,” Living Marxism, no 6. April 1989, 4-5.
[67] Editorial, ?Satanic Flames Ignite British Racism,? The Next Step, no. 7, February 24, 1989, 2.
[68] Workers Hammer, no. 106, April 1989, 1; 3.
[69] See Chris Cutrone, “Class Consciousness (from a Marxist Perspective) Today,” Platypus Review, no. 51, November 2012, https://platypus1917.org/2012/11/01/class-consciousness-from-a-marxist-perspective-today/.
[70] Zizek, Trouble in Paradise: From the End of History to the End of Capitalism, London: Allen Lane, 2014, 99.
[71] SWP chief theorist Alex Callinicos wrote in 2006 that, since 9/11, “Islamophobia has become the most visible—and ‘respectable’—form of racism in the Western world.”
[72] Tariq Ali, “Islamophobia Exposed,” Socialist Worker, no. 2209, July 6, 2010, https://socialistworker.co.uk/features/tariq-ali-islamophobia-exposed/ .
[73] Rosa Luxemburg, Socialism and Churches, 1905, <https://www.marxists.org/archive/luxemburg/1905/misc/socialism-churches.htm>.
[74] Hassan Mahamdaille, ?Islamophobia, Free Speech and Salman Rushdie?s The Satanic Verses,? Socialist Worker, no. 2623, Friday 21 September 2018.
[75] Rushdie, “Imaginary Homelands,” in Imaginary Homelands, 14.
[76] Kushwant Singh referred to scenes in the book as “sheer bad taste,” Hesham El Essawy remarked that the book was “hard going,” while Boris Johnson called Rushdie’s novels “impenetrable.”
[77] Years earlier, when the Danish newspaper Jyllands-Posten had run cartoons of the Muhammad, Alex Callinicos of the SWP lamented, “If there are no limits to free speech, would it be okay for newspapers to publish child pornography on their front pages?” Such moralism is best suited to a clergyman rather than to a Marxist. The cartoons, as Callinicos had explained previously in the Socialist Worker, were but “crude attempts to insult Muslims, whereas The Satanic Verses ‘was a complex work of art by an author of Indian Muslim origins.’”
[78] See Charlie Kimber and Alfie Steer. Gareth Jenkins, ?The Tragedy of Salman Rushdie,? Socialist Review, November 1, 2012, https://socialistworker.co.uk/socialist-review-archive/tragedy-salman-rushdie/.
On Hitchens and the Left, see, Spencer A. Leonard, “Going it alone: Christopher Hitchens and the death of the Left,” Platypus Review, no. 11 (March, 2009). The argument that Rushdie and Hitchens shifted rightward together is made explicitly by Richard Seymour in Unhitched: The Trial of Christopher Hitchens, (London: Verso, 2013).
[79] When Rushdie was knighted in 2007, the critic Terry Eagleton remarked on the pages of the Guardian that the novelist had been rewarded for his self-transformation from a remorseless satirist of the west into a cheerleader for its misadventures in Iraq and Afghanistan. Terry Eagleton, ?Only Pinter Remains,? The Guardian, July 7, 2007, https://www.theguardian.com/commentisfree/2007/jul/07/comment.politics.
[80] Rushdie, Joseph Anton 121.
[81] Ibid., 179.
[82] Ibid., 396.
[83] Hitchens, “Siding with Rushdie.”
[84] Rushdie, Imaginary Homelands, 388.
[85] ?Salman Rushdie on Writing, Political Correctness, Censorship, First Amendment, Chicago Tribune, November 9, 2015. https://www.chicagotribune.com/opinion/commentary/ct-salman-rushdie-humanities-festival-censorship-1110-jm-20151109-story.html
[86] Rushdie, Joseph Anton, 187.
[87] Rushdie, “Outside the Whale,” in Imaginary Homelands, 97.
[12] Kenan Malik, From Fatwa to Jihad: The Rushdie Affair and its Legacy, (London: Atlantic Books, 2009), 145.
[13] Mick Hume and Brendan O?Neill, ?Where is the ?Je suis Salman? Movement?? The Brendan O?Neill Show, August 18, 2022, https://www.spiked-online.com/podcast-episode/where-is-the-je-suis-salman-movement/.
[14] Jake Kettridge, ?Why The Satanic Verses Would Bever be