An Analysis Of Jhumpa Lahiri's The Namesake, An Allegory Of An Exile's Search For True Self

ELA. VASUKI, J. MINNY

Abstract


Culture is "that complex system which encompasses knowledge, belief, art moral, law, tradition, and any other talents and habits acquired by man as a member of society," as EB. Tylor put it. The Namesake, by Pulitzer Prize winner Jhumpa Lahiri, centers on an immigrant couple and their two American-born children and explores the complexities of their shared heritage. This dissertation attempts a close analysis of the experiences of Ganguli families who, in an effort to pass on their cultural values to their children, often end up creating children who grow up with conflicting ideas of who they are and where they come from. In addition, the study analyzes the characters' internal conflicts and prejudices to provide a nuanced and detailed portrait of the immigrant experience. Immigrants cause a shift in character-level ideas and attitudes in two countries.


Keywords


Internal Conflicts, Immigrant Experience, Complexities.

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References


Cohen, Robin.Global Diaspora: An Introduction.London: UGL Press,1997.

Davies, G.Rocio. “ the self in the Text versus the self as Text: Asian American Autobiographical Strategies.” Asian American Literary Studies, Ed, Guiyou Huang.Edinburgh: Edinburgh University Press,2005-41-63.

Forero, Ann Marie. “Immigrant motherhood and Transnationality in Jhumpa Lahiri’s Fiction.” Literature compass4.3 (2007): 851-861.26 October 2010.

Kral, Francoise. “ Shaky Ground and New Territorialities in Brick Lane by Monica Ali and the Namesake by Jhumpa Lahiri.” Journal of postcolonial writing 45.1 (2007):65-76.web.26 October 2010.

Lahiri, Jhumpa. The Namesake, Great Britain; Harper Collins publisher,2003.


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