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The Chaos of the Melting Pot: Multiculturalism in Bharati Mukherjee’s Fiction

2023-01-07 19:34:59

Bharati Mukherjee stands among new novelists in the field of Indian literature. Her explanation of her overseas expatriate experience and its impact on women makes it possible for readers to understand the lives of South Asians living in the United States now. The aim of this paper is to study how Barady · McSuzy catches the chaos of "American crucibles" of American Indian Immigrants in her short stories and novels. Family safety and desire for the comfort of our own culture causes a conflict that only those born in the third world can understand this conflict which is the choice of living in the West.

Bharati Mukherjee (1940) is a representative of an Indian American who is one of the decisive fictitious female writers of post-modernist literature. Bharati Mukherjee became a powerful member of American literary circles in novels such as The Tiger's Daughter (1972), Jasmine (1989), Wife (1975), Middleman and Other Stories (1988), Darkness. (1985) "The World's Holders" (1993) and "Leave to Me" (1997) are two other novels by Bharati Mukherjee. The inhuman tendency of post-visual writers and negative ability, the case of non-traditional experience is a major problem in future separation. Baratti's approach to express her sense of life is not a sensitivity but a combination of loneliness and alienation.

Immigrant female writers are always emphasizing links between their body, immigration experience and identity formation. In the case of Bharati Mukherjee, her novel is inevitable in autobiographical elements. Her protagonist reflects the fight against her own identity, from the exile in India, and Indian Indian in Canada, and finally American immigrants. "Rudnick, Lois Palken, Judith E. Smith, and Rachel Rubin." American Identity: Getting Started, USA: Blackwell Publishing Ltd, 2006: 1 Bharati Mukherjee Born from Parents of Far East Hinduism in Kolkata, India, her mother who got married at the age of 16 encouraged him to go on to college and find a career.

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)