PERSPECTIVE Exile Literature and the Diasporic Indian Writer (original) (raw)

IMMIGRATION AND ESTRANGEMENT IN INDIAN DIASPORA LITERATURE A CRITICAL STUDY

AABS Publishing House, Kolkata, 2019

The anthology Immigration and Estrangement in Indian Diaspora Literature: A Critical Study attempts to study diasporic sensibilities in writings of Indian Diaspora writers. The book mainly focuses its study on the sense of displacement and dislocation rising due to immigration from homeland to hostland as found in writings of Indian Diaspora writers. Authors have tried to give their best outputs to reach this anthology to its intended goal. Hopefully this book will be helpful to both students and scholars alike.

THE DEPICTION OF NOSTALGIC EXPERIENCE OF DIASPORA IN CONTEMPORARY INDIAN NOVELS IN ENGLISH

JOURNAL OF HIGHER EDUCATION AND RESEARCH SOCIETY , 2013

When we talk about Diaspora we come to know that it is generally violent and compulsory migration of people from their homelands to other regions. As a central event in colonization, the diasporas may involve millions of people who voluntarily displaced themselves from their countries to work chiefly in advanced countries. Displacement, whether forced or self-imposed, is in many ways a calamity. Yet, a peculiar but a potent point to note is that writers in their displaced existence generally tend to excel in their work, as if the changed atmosphere acts as a stimulant for them. These writings in dislocated circumstances are often termed as exile literature that has negative connotations but if the self-exile of a Byron is considered, then the response to that very word becomes ambivalent. If a holistic view of the word “exile” is taken, the definition would include migrant writers and non-resident writers and even gallivanting writers who roam about for better pastures to graze and fill their oeuvre. World literature has an abundance of writers whose writings have prospered while they were in exile

THE SAGA OF THE JOURNEY OF INDIAN DIASPORA

Indian writers have been making a significant contribution to world literature since independence. The past few years have seen a massive flourishing of Indian fiction in the global market. However, there is a great deal of Indian writers with few themes that usually link them together. The issues of identity and language, the themes of exile and diaspora have become the themes of prime concern of the Indian fiction. The Immigrants’ experience, the question of identity and the expatriate experience continue to furnish remarkable material for fiction. Keywords: Indo-anglian, diaspora, identity crisis, alieanation, immigration, nostalgia for

Diasporic Writings: Narratives Across Space and Time

Value Publications, 2020

Diasporic Writings: Narratives across Space and Time explores the area of Diasporic Studies which is still being theorized and shaped. Not only is this writing creating a new genre, it is also rewriting standard history as it gives personalized accounts of the impact of political manoeuvring. The sheer volume of major works by diasporic authors testifies to the unbounded possibilities and variation in these experiences. V.S. Naipaul, Rohinton Mistry, Vikram Seth, Amitav Ghosh and M.G. Vassanji are well-known diasporic authors from India, yet some aspects of their work have not heretofore been written about. There are some emerging diasporic voices such as Siddhartha Gigoo who has been forced into exile from Kashmir and Tenzin Tsundue, a rising voice among the Tibetan diaspora. They provide fresh insight into the diasporic condition of Kahmiris and Tibetans, respectively. The diasporic experiences of women are projected through papers on Taslima Nasreen, Meera Syal and Shauna Singh Baldwin. The essays in this collection will help the reader understand, in human terms, the impact of global movement of populations because the subject is contemporary and relevant. Diasporic writing is concerned with approximately 30 million Indian diaspora residing outside India to whom India is the homeland, which also includes people who may be displaced internally. It is also a politically sensitive area of study as some of the diaspora are migrants who lost their homes due to colonization, violence, wars or natural calamities. The political aspect affects both homeland and host-land in terms of citizenship and the system of duties and rights affect policies of governments as some papers in this book are able to insinuate. This book seeks to understand the diasporic experiences of these people. Displacement is a traumatic experience and creates either a myth of return to homeland or the determination to make the host country one’s own. The essays in this collection show the pain of the diaspora who are in a permanent state of exile; the changing fabric of relationships due to technology; or the diasporic author using memory to retain his or her past. People are carriers of culture and language and this research on specific diasporic authors may help to understand the soft power generated by the Indian diaspora.

Reflections on Indian Diasporic Fiction: A Review with Reference to Jhumpa Lahiri and Kiran Desai

2018

The word, ‘diaspora’ means ‘to disperse’ in its original Greek context. Ashcroft, Griffith’s and Tiffin define it as the voluntary or forcible movement of peoples from their homelands into new regions... Cohen describes diaspora as the communities of peoples living together in one country who acknowledge that the old country – a nation often buried deep in language, religion, custom or folklorealways has some claim on their loyalty and emotions. (K. Rupinder qtd. in CDL).The literature of diaspora refers to the works written by those who live outside their native land. There are various types and kinds of diaspora literatures-African, Australian, Arab diaspora, and so on. Among these, Indian diasporic literature has caught ‘fancy of writers, literati, historians and sociologists. Since, foreign land offers many fold challenges in terms of adaptation and assimilation of various socio-cultural values, this paper, as such is an attempt to theorize some of the common issues reflected in...

Narration of Self-Imposed Exile in Bhalchandra Nemade's the Hindu: A Prosperous Obstruction of Linving

Postcolonial narratives have brought various issues, themes and concepts into literature including international, national and native literature. The theme of exile—one of the major themes—influenced the native literatures like Nemade's The Hindu marking out many postcolonial issues indulged into native issues. Khanderao— protagonist of the novel—how becomes the victim of exile i.e. self-imposed is delineated in the Hindu. Many Indian writers in English commented on the theme but its influence in Marathi literature has brought an international issue to the Marathi readers giving a good response to English writers and readers. Migration, immigration, emigration and self-exile are the recurrent themes occurring in Diaspora Literature of 1980s. Salman Rushdie, Shashi Tharoor, Amitav Ghosh, Anita Desai, Kiran Desai, Jhumpa Lahiri and many other emerging writers' body have spoken authoritatively on the issues of Postcolonial Literature of " orient " and " occident ...

Exploring the Rise of Indian Diasporic Writing in English

Trans Atlantic Journal of Multidisciplinary Research, 2020

The history of Indian diasporic writing is as old as the diaspora itself. Most of the Indian diaspora now settled in different countries found its inception in the form of indentured labour. The population of diaspora has increased over the years due to increased migration, a shift in global supply chain and technological advancements which together have shrunk the world so much so that the distances have melted and people can always be close to one-another. These things reflect very well in the works of Indian diasporic writers. These writers have taken the world by awe through their works. From Kamala Markandaya to Sunetra Gupta and from V. S. Naipaul to Rohinton Mistry, the Indian diasporic writers have carved out a niche for themselves in the terrain of world literature. They are winning awards and getting worldwide acceptance and acclaim. The themes of these writers involve-nostalgia, loss of identity, loss of culture, reinventing oneself, quest of self, rootlessness, alienation, homeland, amalgamation and assimilation and the other experiences, which come as part of settlement at a new place. Today in the changed scenario the idea of diaspora has got altogether changed. In the present world where there is more tolerance and acceptability, and distances have shrunk, making it a global village, the core themes do not have the poignance and acridness of experience which the early diasporic writers infused their works with in writing about issues and maladies pertaining to the Indian diaspora.

The Theme of Multiple Dislocation and Immigration as Treated in Diaspora Literature-Analyzing the Cases of Select South Asian-American Diaspora Writers

Immigrants undergo displacement in their lives geographically as well as culturally. Diaspora literature talks about the stories of these individuals who are victims of multiple dislocations. It also throws light on the complexity of identity, the hybrid and hyphenated identities as well asthe difficulty in finding a sense of belonging. This paper gives an overview of Diaspora literature and the theme of Multiple Dislocation as seen in the lives of immigrants. The immigrant experiences portrayed by the first generation South Asian-American Diaspora writers Bharati Mukherjee and Meena Alexander are analyzed. It becomes evident that the experiences of the writers influenced their writings about diaspora experiences; the fissures and displacements further accentuated by their poignant styles of writing.The literature of diaspora becomes the collective expression of the nuances of the immigrant psyche.

A Comparative Study of Jhumpa Lahiri and Chitra Banerjee Indo English Writers with Special Reference to Diaspora

2018

This article presented here consists of mainly Diasporic women writers who have been suffered from inside due to migration which has portrayed the cultural or tradition dilemmas or difference in cultures because of a different country from the original homeland, the generational differences, and transformation of their identities during displacement is well being stated and related with other. Clubbing the chosen writers together for comparison may lead to understanding the universality of human behaviour as well as experience about their life and how they lead their life. This article presented here consists of mainly Diasporic women writers who have been suffered from inside due to migration which has portrayed the cultural or tradition dilemmas or difference in cultures because of a different country from the original homeland, the generational differences, and transformation of their identities during displacement is well being stated and related with other. The comparison provi...