Browsing by Subject "Transnational migration"
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Item Construction of 'Kathmandus of Mind' in Upadhayay's Arresting God in Kathmandu(Department of English, 2017) Yonghang, LokendraThis research concentrates on the diasporic depiction of Nepalese society and how the characters are engulfed by homesickness on Samrat Upadhyay's Arresting God in Kathmandu by applying diasporic perspective keeping the identity crisis at heart. A key characteristic of diaspora is that a strong sense of connection to a homeland is maintained through cultural practices and ways of life. Cultural change is another major problem faced by the diasporic community especially by the diasporic people. When they try to settle in a new place they find several changes in the new society. It shocks them and they try to cling to their homeland culture by following it strictly. Dislocation causes severe problems to the diasporic people. When individual moves from his home country to a new land, the foreign atmosphere makes them sick. Based on the reasons for dislocation, the suffering faced by the diasporic people too changes. The gap of studying the feelings and emotions of expatriate writers is filled by the present research work.Item The Limit of Hybridity: Emergent Identities in the Transnational Context in Jhumpa Lahiri’s The Namesake and Bharati Mukherjee’s The Tiger’s Daughter(Faculty of English, 2014) Kattel, Pawanjhumpa Lahiri’s The Namesake and Bharati Mukherjee’s The Tiger’s Daughter dramatize the situations of diaspora, who grapple with their hybridized and spilt character while searching for fixed identities, they also celebrate their multiple identifies in a more dynamic way.By staging contradictory impulse of diasporic characters in their novel, Lahiriand Mukherjee challenge the traditionally conceived notion of migration and transnational migration as primarily caused by compulsive factoItem Nepali transnational migration to India after 1990(Department of International Relations and Diplomacy, 2022) Adhikari, SudipThe flow of people from Nepal to India is pre-historical as the reason for the migration of people have been religious, economic, commercial, and political. The concept of migration has been defined by different scholars and organizations in various ways. However, there has been a different pattern of migration or flow of people from Nepal to India. During different phases, the configuration of Nepali migration to India has been different. According to the regional politics and economy, the Nepali have migrated to other parts of the world. Similarly, the internal political and economic reforms also have aided to the migration of the Nepali. Nevertheless, the root causes and effects of the transnational migration of Nepal to India has been important for the study, and also the link of the aspects of the human security is also significant. Thus, realizing the research gap of the transnational migration to India after 1990 due to different political activism and its connection to human security the research is aimed at investigating the same. Methodologically, the research is qualitative research primarily focusing on both primary and secondary sources. The research focuses on examining the transnational migration, and investigate the transnational migration in Nepal. Transnational perspective provides a more profound comprehension of several global, social, economic and political phenomena, including the social movements, governance, politics, terrorism, violence, and organised crimes. And, the research assesses the historical, economic and strategic perspectives of the transnational migration in Nepal. The research follows with linking the transnational migration with the human security. The study adheres to the definition adopted in the United Nations Development Program’s (UNDP) Human Development Report of 1994, and its subsequent development. Moreover, the study deals with the political activism after 1990. Later, the research examines the transnational migration of Nepalese to India after 1990 connecting to the aspects of the human security. Keywords: Transnational migration, human security, Nepal, India, political activism, 1990.