Acculturate in the Namesake: A Comment on Jhumpa Lahiri ’s Work as Diaspora Literature! Mahesh Bharatkumar Bhatt GJ!jarat Arts &Science College‚ Ellisbridge‚ Ahmedabad Abstract The aim of the paper is to bringforth the wqy in which Jhllmpa Lahiri‚ a Plllitzer prize winner novelist explores the dilemma of name and immigrant ’s sense of identity and belongingness in the novel The Namesake. The paper discllsses the term ’diaspora: and their role in the present dt!Y world‚ the mqjor isslles of
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weaknesses of the claim that migration creates global connections‚ will be discussed. This will be done by discovering what counts as migration and how it is valued‚ how global connections can be both positive and negative‚ about the concepts of ’diaspora’ and ’translocalism’ and how important they are when considering both migration and global connections. To enable the discussion of the subject matter‚ it must first be understood what is meant by the terms ’migration’ and ’global connections’‚ migration
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Stephen Gill ’s Immigrant : A Study In Diasporic Consciousness Nilofar Akhtar The phenomena of Diaspora and expatriation are by all means an old one. However‚ its impact in the present times is larger and deeper. It has become a contemporary social trait and also‚ a literary genre. The growing incidence of the Diaspora has given place to dislocation‚ disintegration‚ dispossession and disbelongingness. The experience of expatriation not only gradually disconnects the individual from his
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ALIENATION THEME IN ROHINTON MISTRY’S TALES FROM FIROZSHA BAAG Rohinton Mistry is a Parsi Zoroastrian and as a person whose ancestors were forced into exile by the Islamic conquest of Iran‚ he was in Diaspora even in India. Like other Parsi writers‚ his writing is informed by this experience of double displacement as a recurrent theme in his literary works. Rohinton’s historical situation involves construction of new identity in the nation to which he has migrated and a complex relationship with
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Shondrika Minor November 11 2014 Credit is the Slavery In society today‚ bad credit begins in college. Students get credit cards and don’t know to properly use them. Meaning they may go over the assigned credit card limit and not pay back what they owe. Majority of the teens our age have bad credit because they can’t manage a credit card. Credit cards are supposed to be in case of an emergency not because you don’t have the money to get what you want. However‚ students don’t think when they swipe
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Dear Sir/Madam‚ Indian School Darsait‚ a community school has been serving the Indian Diaspora for two decades. From a modest start‚ the school has grown to be one of the institutions of high reputation through the hard work of the School Management Committee‚ Parents‚ Staff and students and also the good will and generosity of the wider Indian Expatriate community. Within the constraints of resources the school has always tried to live up to the expectations of its stake holders and has been marching
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themes as characters either grow closer or further away from the values that define them. Lahiri uses gender roles to show how relationships are changing for the Indian diaspora in America. She depicts traditional female gender roles in transition‚ away from traditional Indian culture in “This Blessed House” toward the changing diaspora in “Sexy”. Upon moving into their new home in “This Blessed House”‚ Twinkle begins to find catholic relics hidden throughout the house. The discoveries of these
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187 MEDIA‚ DIASPORA AND GENDER IDENTITY IN NATIONALISTIC SPACES: NEGOTIATING GENDER IN DIASPORIC CULTURAL AND LITERARY SPACES. Baby Pushpa Sinha* Lalan Kishore Singh** This paper endeavors to study gender identity in the framework of the ideology of nationalism and its projections in media and literary texts. It analyses how masculinity and nationalism have always been parallel discourses in its exclusion or subordination of feminine roles in the constructions of the nation whether through its media
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In my opinion‚ African Diaspora has multiple definitions but all of them sum up into one only. All in the end‚ African Diaspora is expected in different ways that in one point started everything else. The Diaspora took place when the Africans were relocated in the regions of the Americas‚ causing them to bring their culture‚ society‚ traditions with them. With these elements and time going by‚ have created new ones. Not only have they created these new elements but also‚ it has led to creating new
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The Future of Indians Diaspora Though Indians lived under conditions of appalling poverty in many places of the world where they were first taken as indentured labor‚ a number of remarkable transformations were effected over two or three generations. Through sheer perseverance‚ labor‚ and thrift‚ and most significantly by a calculated withdrawal into their culture‚ in which they found forces of sustenance‚ these Indians successfully labored to give their children and grand-children better economic
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