Browsing by Subject "Diasporic consciousness"
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Item Displacement and Alienation in le thie diem thuy’s The gangster we are all looking for(Department of English, 2011) Sapkota, YubarajThis research deals with the experience of Vietnamese immigrant family in the United States who are having a traumatic life due to their physical distance from their native land. They are suffering from diasporic alienation and identity crisis in the multicultural society. When the familyforcibly leaves its homeland it is affected by foreign culture. They not only find it difficult to assimilate but also cannot disown their native culture. Their identity becomes hybrid amidst the intersection of multiple cultures.So, their ambivalent orin-between position germinates alienation and identity crisis which pushes them to remain in the sense of tumultuous life. As a result their life crawls through the memory or nostalgia which becomes an alternative source in search of fix identity and belongingness.Item Identity Crisis of Migrant Workers in Monica Ali’s In the Kitchen(Department of English, 2015) Bhattarai, Rup NarayanMonica Ali's In the Kitchen expresses the working class’s position through identifying the exploitation and ways of striking them. Ali attempts in presentation of the different community occupying a large land in England. The author seems to have dealt with the communal issues especially the immigrants’ economic condition and their overall lifestyle. In course of coping with this issue, Ali has been too much biased and unfair. Despite not having adequate information about immigrant, she pretends to have known a lot which is pretty clear in the novel In the Kitchen. Yure, the central character, her mouthpiece has been portrayed in such a way that she has always revolted against the Immigrant culture and lifestyle. It discloses the innermost motive of the writer that she herself is too preoccupied with the concept that the Immigrant culture and people of its followers are orthodox and rigid which is in fact partially true. Thus, the novel in its entire is the misrepresentation of the Immigrants. Monica Ali's In the Kitchen expresses the working class’s position through identifying the exploitation and ways of striking them. Ali attempts in presentation of the different community occupying a large land in England. The author seems to have dealt with the communal issues especially the immigrants’ economic condition and their overall lifestyle. In course of coping with this issue, Ali has been too much biased and unfair. Despite not having adequate information about immigrant, she pretends to have known a lot which is pretty clear in the novel In the Kitchen. Yure, the central character, her mouthpiece has been portrayed in such a way that she has always revolted against the Immigrant culture and lifestyle. It discloses the innermost motive of the writer that she herself is too preoccupied with the concept that the Immigrant culture and people of its followers are orthodox and rigid which is in fact partially true. Thus, the novel in its entire is the misrepresentation of the Immigrants.