Plot Points
Theme Points
Quote Me
Real V.S Unreal
Rushdie's Moves
100

What city are Gibreel and Saladin in during these chapters?

London

100

What significant theme is shown through saladin's identity crisis? 

the struggles of cultural and personal identity

100

Who says "He had become afraid of the night"?

Gibreel

100

True or False: Gibreel hears voices and believes he is an angel?

true

100

What writing style blends magic and reality?

magical realism 

200

What causes Gibreel and Allie's relationship to fall apart?

Gibreel's jealousy and mental instability.

200

What theme is present in Gibreel's belief he is the archangel? 

religious symbolism and mental breakdown  

200

What does "We are made, not born" suggest about identity?

That our identities are shaped by life not destiny.

200

What role do dreams play in these chapters?

They reflect inner conflicts and distort reality 

200

what tone does Rushdie often use to critique serious topics?

satire 

300

Who helps Saladin recover and find a place to stay?

Zeeny Vakil

300

What theme is reflected in Gibreel's silence before his death?

loss of voice, identity, and spiritual collapse 

300

Who says "My old self, the Englishman, is finally dead"?

Saladin Chamcha

300

Name a scene where the line between real and unreal is incredibly blurry?

Gibreel's confrontation with Allie when he hears her "speaking in tongues"

300

how does Rushdie use fragmentation or nonlinear story telling? 

to show the complexity and fractured identity 

400

What does Gibreel begin to believe about the people around him?

That they are a part of a conspiracy or divine test.

400

What theme is explored through forgiveness between Saladin and his father? 

redemption and healing across generations 

400

What does Gibreel's silence in the end symbolize?

The complete breakdown of his identity and agency.

400

how do hallucination deepen Gibreels character conflict?

They externalize his internal confusion and crisis of faith 

400

Why would Rushdie use symbolism instead of being literal?

Lets him explore themes in a layered and poetic way 

500

How do Gibreel's internal struggles shape the ending of his story?

His inability to reconcile identity, faith, and reality leads to his tragic downfall.
500

how does the novel explain the balance between doubt and faith in these chapters?

 it shows that questioning belief can be empowering but also isolating, especially when someone's identity is already fragile. 


500

Pick one quote from these chapters. How does it reflect a key theme of transformation or faith? (open-ended)

various answers accepted

500
why might Rushdie blur fantasy and reality in a story about identity and religion?

to show how personal truths, beliefs, and trauma shape our perceptions of the world 

500

How does Rushdie's literary technique challenge traditional storytelling and belief systems? 

They get the reader to think critically and not just consume and show that beliefs and identity are multi dimensional