Chapter V: A City Visible but Unseen
A dream provides details of Saladin's escape from the "hospital." He phones his old work partner, Mimi Mamoulian, only to find that he has lost his job. He briefly encounters the name of Billy Battuta, who will figure prominently in the novel later. His old boss, Hal Valance, explains why his television series has been cancelled. He is enraged to learn that Gibreel is alive, and--far from helping him out in any way--is claiming he missed Flight 420 and seems to be engaged into making his "satanic verses" dreams into a movie. Meanwhile his wife has become pregnant by Jumpy. Everything seems to be conspiring against Saladin; and, battered into submission by fate, he loses his supernatural qualities after a visit to the bizarre Hot Wax nightclub. A subplot involves a series of gruesome murders of old women for which the black militant leader Uhuru Simba is arrested.
The next section returns to the story of Allie Cone, detailing her childhood and young adulthood. Her reunion was Gibreel is passionate, but it will be spoiled by his insane jealousy. Again haunted by Rekha Merchant, a deranged Gibreel tries to confront London in his angelic persona, but he is instead knocked down by the car of film producer S. S. Sisodia, who returns him to Allie and signs him up to make a series of films as the archangel of his dreams. Again he tries to leave Allie, but a riot during a public appearance lands him back again, defeated, at Allie's doorstep. At the end of the chapter we learn that a most uncharacteristic heat wave has broken out in London.
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A City Visible but Unseen
Rushdie says of this chapter title:
it seemed to me at that point that [the London Indian community] really was unseen. It was there and nobody knew it was there. And I was very struck by how often, when one would talk to white English people about what was going on, you could actually take them to these streets and point to these phenomena, and they would somehow still reject this information.
Rushdie: "Interview," p. 68.
[251]
Once I'm an owl
A quotation from Apuleius' The Golden Ass, Book III, Chapter 16 in which the main character, trying to persuade a sorceress to transform him into an owl seeks reassurance that he can resume his own shape. He is instead changed into an ass, and can only be changed back into his human form again by praying to the goddess Isis. The text of Book III.
hajis
People who have gone on the Hajj, the
pilgrimage to Mecca (Arabic). See above, note on p. 235 [242].
VCR addicts
Rushdie, like many Indians and Pakistanis calls videotapes "VCRs" instead of "videos." Videotapes of
Indian films, particularly musicals, are a staple of emigre entertainment.
in Dhaka . . . when Bangladesh was merely an East Wing
Before it seceded in the bloody war of 1971, the territory
now known as Bangladesh
constituted the isolated East Wing of
Pakistan. Its capital is more commonly spelled "Dacca." Information about Bangladesh.
Why does Mr. Sufyan refer to himself as an emigrant rather than as an immigrant?
Lucius Apuleius of Madaura
Author of the famous Latin 2nd century satirical classic, The
Golden Ass. Apuleius was in fact not from Morocco (Verstraete
328-329). See above, note on p. 243 [251].
[252]
satyrs
Proverbially lustful half-men, half goats.
Isis
Originally an Egyptian fertility goddess, she had been transformed in Apuleius' time into the center of a mystery cult and was usually called "Sarapis." The story of Apuleius' transformation by Isis.
begum sahiba
Honored wife/lady (Hindi, Urdu).
[253]
Wing Chun
The name of a Chinese Kung Fu style associated with a woman
named Yim Wing Chun. It is traditionally considered a woman's
form of fighting though it is very popular among men as well.
Bruce Lee
Bruce Lee (1940-1973) was the star of many kung fu movies. Note how cross-cultural this reference is: an Indian immigrant emulating a Chinese hero using the skills taught her by an Indian instructor. Lee himself was an immigrant, having been born in San Francisco, moved to Hong Kong, educated at the University of Washington and moved back to the U.S. His early death stimulated a cult surrounding his memory which is reflected in the girls' pajamas.