Nobody should be given knighthoods. The honors system is a farce (although it might be fun if, in the original spirit of the title, nominees were given battle-axes and told to have at each other to prove themselves).
The criteria for being made a 'Sir' are a mystery, particularly in the field of arts and entertainment, so it's difficult to say whether Rushdie is any more or less deserving than, say, Elton John or
Morecambe and Wise.
The timing of Rushdie's knighthood is odd. Why now? He has been a one-hit wonder in literature, hasn't he? "Midnight's Children" was an impressive and important book, but nothing he's done since has come anywhere close. Has anyone read "Satanic Verses", the book that's causing all the fuss? It's hardly a page-turner - more a self-indulgent and failed stab at magical realism; probably great fun to write, but a chore to read.
I guess Rushdie's honour is kind of like John Wayne's Oscar; it's difficult to say what exactly it's for, except being in the business long enough - or maybe symbolising something that the award givers want to publicly acknowledge (which is maybe how the protestors at Rushdie's award see things).
quote:
The article focuses on calls for violence.
There are always going to be a few quotable hot-heads and fanatics. On the other hand, polls in the US suggest that about 30% of people there support Bush's actions in Iraq. This implies that they believe, or can somehow justify to themselves, or don't care, that hundreds of thousands of Iraqi civilians have been killed for no good reason. I guess that kind of 'call to violence' doesn't make as good copy as the up-close-and-personal demands for Rushdie's assassination, but isn't the tacit support for industrial-scale slaughter worse?