Generally, when explaining negotiations between immigrant women and the New World, Bharati Mukherjee became important for the past handling of time and space. Often, her novel depicts the past time and space as an external space that must be escaped to establish (re) the identity. For example, among his wives, Mukherjee stated that Dimple was unable to escape the past, as he was unable to transform into an American who had an agent to define himself It was. Meanwhile, in Jasmine, the hero almost completely rejected her past and India, promoted transformation and assimilation in the United States.
The concept of families and immigrants is highly embedded in the narrative studies proposed by Bharati Mukherjee among the desirable daughters. It was the immigration consciousness that changed Padma 's identity, and Padma finally changed New York to her house, and it was her first choice. But her inseparable attachment to her family made her a supporter and guardian of the tradition of Bangladesh in the United States. Therefore foreign cultures can not destroy her traditional identity. On the other hand, it only remaps nad to rebuild her cultural identity. Thus immigrants play an important role in limiting individual identity and cultural attitudes and attitudes.
The ideal girl of Bharati Mukherjee and Namesake of Jhumpa Lahiri draw a self-identity trip through the hero of each novel. The central figure of these two novels lost themselves by camouflaging their personality while escaping the identity of India. But these two roles mature through the maintenance of the Indian tradition during assimilation in the United States, the tragic events that occurred in their lives, and the constant struggle to explore their same name It is. The ideal daughter in the Hall of Fame and Tharachatji of Gogol Ganli discovered their self identity and escaping their real identity is a gap between their Indian tradition and their American lifestyle I understand that it only increases.
MUKHERJEE, BHARATI (1940-) Bharati Mukherjee grew up in Calcutta, studied at Calcutta and the University of Barroda and acquired a master's degree in English and ancient Indian culture. She moved to the United States in 1961 to attend the Iowa writer seminar and finally got a master's degree and a doctorate from the University of Iowa. From 1968 to 1972, she lived in Canada; after returning to the United States she began writing seriously. She commented that she became a US citizen in 1988 and feels that she belongs to the United States. Mukherjee wrote two short stories, Darkness (1985) and The Middleman (1987), seven novels, Desirable Daughters (2002) and The Tree Bride (2004), and some non-works, two of them It was. It was written by her husband, writer Clark Blythe. His wife Panna went to America for study and in a while my husband went home to visit her.
Facts about companions of American short story document, 2nd edition (literary series companion)