Resistance against Western Cultural Imperialism inThe Tree Bride
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Faculty Arts in English
Abstract
The main purpose of this research is to show the resistance against western
cultural imperialism in Bharati Mukherjee’s The Tree Bride. Bharati Mukherjee
presents the counter discourse just opposite than colonial literature in the
representation of west and east. The text is a story of Tara Chatterjee, the protagonist
as well as the narrator of the novel, who is shaped according to ancient Indian myths,
customs, and traditions. Her cultural identity is formed according to the belief and
religion of her native country India though she has been living in America. She picks
up the story of heroism from her own legend Tara Lata, from her own cultural
heritage and native place connecting with own identity and cultural and national
glory. Mukherjee even shows the pitiful life of English street life through John Mist
as if it is like the representation of non- western people in colonial literature as the
counter discourse against western supremacy in literature. The politic of picking the
story from San Francisco to Bengal by focusing and valorizing the Indian rituals and
tradition as well as by giving the counter discourse against western literature in the
representation of west and east is the manifestation of Mukherjee’s cultural awareness
as well as a challenge against the cultural imperialism of west. This research shows
how Bharati Mukherjee has resisted against cultural imperialism throughout the text
The Tree Bride. As this research is studied through post colonial method it captures
the various issues, dimension and study areas of post colonial literature such as
cultural diversity, hybridity, Diasporas, identity crisis, ethnical and racial issues etc.