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Rushdie slams support of film protesters
British novelist Salman Rushdie has squared off against feminist icon Germaine Greer, labeling her support for a group of Bengali film protesters as ?philistine, sanctimonious, and disgraceful?. The protesters oppose the film version of Monica Ali?s book Brick Lane, a story about a Bangladeshi woman living in the area of east London, because of the way the book depicts people in the area. Their campaign has led to the cancellation of plans to shoot scenes for the movie in the neighborhood. Greer wrote that locals had a right to prevent filming, and that Ali failed to realize that some residents might have found her plot outlandish. Others have supported the book and film. Ali ?writes in English and her point of view is ? whether she allows herself to impersonate a village Bangladeshi woman or not ? British. She has forgotten her Bengali, which she would not have done if she had wanted to remember it. When it comes to writing a novel, however, she becomes the pledge of our multi-ethnicity,? Greer wrote in The Guardian newspaper. Rushdie, who received death threats after writing The Satanic Verses, lashed back at Greer with a letter in The Guardian newspaper. ?At the height of the assault against my novel ?The Satanic Verses? Germaine Greer stated : ?I refuse to sign petitions for that book of his, which was about his own troubles. She went on to describe me as a megalomaniac, an Englishman with dark skin.? They both attended Cambridge University in the late ?60s and have had several reported rows over the years.
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