Browsing by Subject "American cultures"
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Item The Clash of cultures in Henry James’Daisy Miller and An International Episode(Faculty of English, 2013) Poudel, SujataThis thesis entitled“The Clash of Cultures in Henry James’ Daisy Miller and An International Episode,”deals with the confrontation between European and American cultures.James brings the people from two different cultures–America, ‘new world’ and Europe, ‘old world’ together and shows how they behave. American character Daisy Miller, Mrs. West gate and Bessie Alden, for the sake of their individual freedom reject and rebel against European restriction and hypocrisy. America stands for freedom and innocence and Europe for restriction, sophistication and corruption. There arises an irresolvable dispute between ‘new world’ and ‘old world’, represented by America and Europe respectively. The study makes a brief view of these stories and brings in light the problems that the protagonists face in different cultures.The characters of both stories adhere to their own cultural backgrounds and never come to compromise with each other. The clash is created by the characters’ into lerability of each others’ culture as they are accustomed to their respective cultures.Item Cultural Hybridity in Jhumpa Lahiri’s The Namesake(Faculty of English, 2014) Gurung, SangitaJhumpa Lahiri’s narrator in The Namesake explicates an immigrant’s position of cultural hybridity in the United States. In Lahiri’s narrative, Gogol Nikhil Ganguli vacillates between the traditional Bengali and modern American cultures in terms of his fascination of the West and resentment of the East. Gogol and Sonia represent young immigrants in America, whereas their parents stand for original Bengali culture. Ashoke chooses a Russian name while Gogol’s family back home in Calcutta suggest Nikhil as an official name for the boy in school. Ashoke gives the boy Gogol as his pet name in the honor of a famous Russian writer; however, the son legally changes his name into Gogol Nikhil Ganguli shortly before he leaves for college. Both Gogol and Ashoke embody cultural ambivalence resulted from their experiences of two different worldviews, the Indian and the American. The protagonist, while migrating from the East to the West, shares both the cultures: the original indigenous Bengali and the modern American one. Gogol represents the many of the second generation immigrants while his father embodies the first generation, and both are split between the two worlds. The protagonist’s relationship with parents and family reflect the hero’s quest for his identity while living in the Indian diaspora in the West. Not only Gogol’s engagement with Maxine but also separation from her embodies immigrants’ split identities. After reluctance for some time, Gogol marries, Moushumi, the Bengali girl, but their relationship ends with their divorce. Gogol, who resents his name over the years, accepts it after his father explains its significance. His hatred of name replicates his resentment of tradition and Indian identity because of upbringing in different world. Precisely, Lahiri’s novel explicates generational and cultural gaps in the disaspora.