EESE 1/1996

Thomas Kullmann (Göttingen)

Eastern and Western Story-Telling in Salman Rushdie's Haroun and the Sea of Stories

In 1990 Salman Rushdie published a children's book entitled Haroun and the Sea of Stories. The title alludes to two outstanding Eastern collections of stories: the Indian Kathasaritsagara ("Ocean of the Streams of Story"; e.g. Bechert 1993: 65), and the Arabian Nights who feature the famous caliph Haroun al Rashid. In Rushdie's book, Haroun is the son of Rashid Khalifa, a famous story-teller, who loses his powers of story-telling when his wife leaves him for Mr Sengupta, a town clerk who hates fictional stories. Haroun accompanies his father to the beautiful Dull Lake which closely resembles the Dal Lake in Kashmir. Having taken residence on one of this lake's famous tourist house boats, called Arabian Nights Plus One, Haroun embarks on a quest to recover his father's lost powers of story-telling. A Water Genie takes him to the Ocean of the Streams of Story and invites him to drink of it. Instead of experiencing a beautiful love story, however, he undergoes a nightmare. The ocean turns out to be poisoned by a tyrannous "Cultmaster" (148) who aims at controlling the world. After visiting Gup City which is oppressed by Khattam-Shud, the cultmaster, Haroun finally manages to stop the source which is poisoning the ocean of stories. As a reward, the king of Gup provides him with a happy ending: Haroun awakes in his bed on the houseboat and finds that his father has recovered his gift of story-telling. His mother returns to the family to complete the happy ending.

The story is characterized by a vast range of intertextual and intercultural references. The names of the characters as well as the settings are obviously Indian; some of the names are explained in a glossary appended to the book. Other elements of the plot, however, resemble Michael Ende's Unendliche Geschichte ('Neverending Story', published in 1979): The city where the Khalifas live is "so ruinously sad that it has forgotten its name" (15). As with the Infantine Empress in Ende's book, this lack of a name is obviously due to a collective lack of imagination. The name of the city is later revealed to be Kahani, "story". Like Bastian/Atréju in The Neverending Story, Haroun engages in a sort of chivalrous quest to recover lost areas of the imagination. The use of the quest motif as a narrative frame obviously goes back to the English tradition of children's books which originates in Charles Kingsley's Water-Babies and Lewis Carroll's Alice-books. In these books, children, like knights in medieval and Renaissance romances, embark on perilous journeys and undergo exciting adventures to fulfill a certain mission (Kullmann 1995: 120f.). Another motif current in this tradition is dreaming. When Alice awakes at the end of the book, she finds out that her adventures in wonderland have taken place in a dream. Like Alice, Haroun finds out that he has been asleep while engaged in his adventures. As in dreams, the experiences of his quest refer back to what happened in real life on the previous days and weeks. The motif of dream vision, like the quest motif, can be traced back to older European literary traditions; they are the basis upon which many famous works of classical antiquity and the Middle Ages are built (See, e.g., Clemen 1963: 68-70; Edwards 1989: 23-32).

These elements of European story-telling mix with allusions to the East and to Eastern mythology. As Rashid explains to Haroun, the spirits of dead kings live on in the guise of hoopoe birds (25), who are also said to be helpful companions on quests (64). A kind of mechanical hoopoe bird will carry Haroun to the Ocean of the Streams of Story and to Gup City, which is the first stage in his quest. Haroun is accompanied by a Water Genie, who seems to have sprung directly from the Arabian Nights. The various colours of the ocean recall the vividness which is certainly one of the most striking features of the stories of this famous collection, with their countless references to precious gems of various colours. Haroun and the hoopoe are joined by two fish as companions, Bagha and Goopy, whose names, as Rushdie points out in the glossary, are derived from a film by Satyajit Ray, the well-known Indian film director. The 'pages' whom Haroun meets at Gup City owe their names to a pun on pages in both the senses of servants and of pages in books. As pages in books they share many particulars with the game of cards in Alice in Wonderland. Another reference to Eastern culture occurs when, later on, part of the army of Gup City meet a "shadow warrior" who has difficulties with speaking but can communicate in Abhinaya, a classical Indian dance which he uses as a language.

Many of the intertextual elements refer to texts which are part of traditional children's reading, e.g. fairy tales or Lewis Carroll's Alice-books. There is even an allusion to Roald Dahl's Charlie and the Chocolate Factory (209). Although no child reader will grasp all of the allusions to other works of fiction or to other cultural traditions which Rushdie's book contains, his or her curiosity will certainly be aroused. The Western child reader becomes aware of the existence of Eastern, particularly Indian, history and mythology, as well as of traditions of Eastern story telling. The book will certainly motivate further enquiry and provide food for the imagination.

In Rushdie's book, however, intertextual allusions are not just heaped up for their own sakes. They rather serve to convey a 'metafictional' statement. In the beginning Haroun asks his father: "What is the use of stories that aren't even true?" (22). The answer to this question is what Haroun will find out on his quest. There is first of all the beauty of the stories, as indicated by the beautiful colours on the Ocean of the Streams of Story. The stories are called, for example, "Princess Rescue Story G/1001/RIM/777/M(w)i, better known as 'Rapunzel'" (73). Both Grimm's fairy-tales and the thousand and one Arabian Nights are alluded to. When Haroun takes a drink from the Ocean, however, the "princess-rescue" story turns out wrong: The hero who climbs the tower where the princess is imprisoned is transformed into a spider. The princess does not like being rescued by a spider and pushes him off. When Haroun regains his senses, his companion the Water Genie explains to him how the story should have ended: "'You saved the princess and walked off into the sunset as specified, I presume?'" (74). The obvious point is that even conventional stories can be enjoyable. With the transformation of the hero into a spider, Rushdie certainly alludes to Kafka's famous short story, "Die Verwandlung" (Later on, Haroun will meet a "shadow warrior" who, living in a land of silence, can only produce gurgling and coughing sounds: "Gogogol" and "Kafkafka" [129]). But even if the reader does not realize this allusion, he or she will understand that the poisoning of the story refers to the modernist tendency of looking for problems and conflict in literature rather than for beauty and harmony. The same point is made by "Blabbermouth", one of the pages of Gup City, in answer to Haroun's question about the reality of his present experience: "'That's the trouble with you sad city types: you think a place has to be miserable and dull as ditchwater before you believe it's real'" (114).

Another statment concerning the techniques of fiction concerns the mixing up of different stories and different cultural traditions. A fairy-tale creature, the Water Genie, finds no difficulties in riding a mechanical, electronic and computerized vessel which has the shape of a hoopoe bird and can speak. This mixture of literary motifs becomes a topic of discussion when Haroun wonders if the various streams of story do not disturb one another. The answer he gets is: "Any story worth its salt can handle a little shaking up" (79). The multiplicity of streams in the "Ocean" indicates that there is an immense reservoir of stories which are allowed to mingle to produce new stories. This "shaking-up" corresponds to what happens in dreams. The mingling motifs from different traditions which characterizes Rushdie's books is both an attempt at an accurate rendering of the processes of consciousness in dreams and a literary technique. This technique may perhaps be called post-modernist. Unlike the moderns who oppose traditions (such as fairy tales with happy endings), Rushdie as a post-modern author arranges an ironical survey of various and seemingly incompatible traditions. This ironical point of view corresponds to Umberto definition of post-modernism, given in his Postille a 'Il nome della rosa', according to which post-modernism constitutes of an ironical review of traditions (Eco 1986: 80; Barth 1980). The resources of various cultures are brought together to give rise to a new imaginative and 'multi-cultural' consciousness. This attitude is of course based on the assumption that traditions should not be dismissed as irrelevant as they constitute what is called the cultural heritage. The reader, moreover, becomes aware of the fact that all stories are "mosaics of quotations", as Julia Kristeva put it in her famous essay on Mikhail Bakhtin (1980) With the help of post-modern elements of narration Rushdie thus provides an insight into the workings of language and texts, fictional and otherwise.

The final poetological message concerns the practical use of "stories which aren't even true." A reason which would be sufficient in itself is that stories provide pleasure. But why should a monster called the "Cultmaster" poison the Ocean of the Streams of Story? An answer is given in a conversation between Haroun and the cultmaster:

The realm of the imagination can provide for alternative worlds. Any attempt at controlling the world can be frustrated by creating a new world in a story. Giving scope to imagination ensures freedom from oppression. The very fact that fictional stories do not necessarily represent reality constitute their strength: even if no happy ending is likely in real life, it is always possible to create one imaginatively.

The story of the monster who hates stories has an obvious autobiographical reference: The monster can easily be identified with the Ayatollah Khomeini who sentenced Rushdie to death for having written The Satanic Verses, the book Khomeini considered blasphemous. On one level, Haroun and the Sea of Stories can be read as Rushdie's defence of his novel and as his answer to the Ayatollah: The Satanic Verses consists of a "shaking up" of old stories, including what Rushdie called the "grand narrative" of Islam (1992: 432). The aim of the book is not to fight religion but to look at it from an ironical point of view, hereby providing pleasure and enlarging the mind. In denouncing the book the Ayatollah revealed himself to be actuated by his wish to gain totalitarian power.

There are, however, indications in the text of Haroun and the Sea of Stories that this book should not just be interpreted in so limited a way. Khattam-Shud not only recalls Khomeini, but also resembles, as Haroun notices, Mr Sengupta, the town clerk with whom Haroun's mother ran off. It is not only tyrants or dictators who oppose the liberty of writing and hearing stories but also people who believe in business-like rationalism in the narrowest sense of the word. As Mr Sengupta takes off with Rashid's wife, he scores a victory over the story-teller and endangers Rashid's story-telling powers. Haroun, the boy, is in danger of being influenced by the obviously successful attitude of his father's adversary. In the end, however, when Rashid regains his powers of story-telling and his wife returns to him, imagination and fantasy triumph over both cold-hearted rationalism and totalitarian tyranny. We are not to suppose, by the way, that imagination and rational modernity are mutually exclusive. The hoopoe bird, which carries Haroun over the Ocean of the Streams of Story, is reminiscent of ancient legends while being, the same time, a perfect modern computerized machine. As the Water Genie points out, imagination is not just useful but actually necessary to get hold of reality: "'... Africa, have you seen it? No? Then is it truly there? ... Kangaroos, Mount Fujiyama, the North Pole? And the past, did it happen? And the future, will it come? Believe in your own eyes and you'll get into a lot of trouble, hot water, a mess'" (63.). As a cognitive faculty, imagination is indispensable to supplement eyesight.

As already stated, this book's concept of fantasy and imagination is characterized by mixing up Eastern and Western cultural traditions. It is important to note that these traditions are mixed in an almost imperceptible way. There is no opposition between the East on one hand and the West on the other. The principles which oppose one another are of a quite different kind: There is the liberty of story-telling, imagination and fantasy on one hand and rationality and control on the other. The story Haroun takes up by drinking from the Ocean resembles a Brothers Grimm fairy-tale, i.e., a product of Western culture. Western culture also provided the modernist poison. The originator of the poisoning, Khattam-Shud, can be classified with the East, inasmuch as he represents the Iranian ayatollah. His insistence on control, however, also represents political values found in the West. The rationalist opposition to fictional stories could also be supposed to be typical of Western cold-heartedness. The champion of this attitude, however, is Mr Sengupta, an Indian. While Rushdie on the one hand recurs to traditional Western concepts of "the Orient", he on the other hand avoids any "orientalism" in Edward W. Said's sense of the term. Narrative elements associated with the East and the West are on an equal footing; neither the East nor the West can claim a "flexible positional superiority", which according to Said (1995: 7) characterizes Western "Orientalism" .

While no preference is expressed for any one culture, the variety of experience provided by the juxtaposition of seemingly incoherent elements taken from different cultures appears as an essential factor for the exercise of imagination. Multicultural variety enlarges the scope of fantasy and makes new combinations of old traditions possible. The use of stories consists on one hand of the fun and beauty provided, as well as of the fact of being means of communication. In addition to this, the reader is invited to look at multicultural fiction and intercultural exchange as liberating forces which can be set against all kinds of power abuse and totalitarian control.

Haroun and the Sea of Stories is a book mainly addressed to Western readers. Its characters and scenery are obviously Indian. The literary tradition where the book can be placed is British children's fantasy, a tradition which is particularly open for the presentation of material from various sources. From Alice in Wonderland onwards books of this kind have contained reflections on other literary texts, reflections which can be called metafictional. In the Alice-books, nursery rhymes are repeatedly referred to, as well as mythological stories and fairy-tales. An immediate precursor of Rushdie is Michael Ende with his Neverending Story, which includes an ancient quest hero as well as a Chinese dragon and other creatures of various origins. It is within this tradition of children's literature that Rushdie writes his poetological parable - making use of children's imaginativeness to address both child and adult readers.

References

Barth, John (1980): "The Literature of Replenishment". In: The Atlantic [Jan.], 65-71.
Bechert, Heinz, und Georg von Simson, eds.(1993). Einführung in die Indologie: Stand, Methoden, Aufgaben. Darmstadt [1979].
Clemen, Wolfgang (1963). Chaucer's Early Poetry. London.
Eco, Umberto (1986). Nachschrift zum 'Namen der Rose'. München [1983].
Edwards, Robert R. (1989). The Dream of Chaucer: Representation and Reflection in the Early Narratives. Durham, N.C.
Kristeva, Julia (1980). "Word, Dialogue, and Novel". In: Desire in Language: A Semiotic Approach to Literature and Art. New York, 64-91.
Kullmann, Thomas (1995). "Englische Kindererzählungen: Ein Forschungsprojekt". In: Anglistik: Mitteilungen des Verbandes deutscher Anglisten 6.1, 115-124.
Rushdie, Salman (1992). "One Thousand Days in a Balloon". In: Imaginary Homelands: Essays and criticism 1981-1991. London [1991], 430-439.
Said, Edward W. (1995). Orientalism. Harmondsworth [1978].

Prof. Dr. Thomas Kullmann
Seminar für Englische Philologie
Humboldtallee 13
39073 Göttingen