Indian diaspora Essays

  • Race, Migration and the Indian Diaspora

    1265 Words  | 3 Pages

    The relationship between race, migration and the Indian diaspora is one of complexity. The Indian diaspora resulted in Indians in many areas of the world, which soon gave rise to migration. These migrant Indians are still heralded as Indian, despite many not having been born in India, and, through migration, race then becomes their defining characteristic. With this, race becomes the basis of comparison and praise for some, but brings with it racial tension. However, racial tension is often tempered

  • Diasporic Identity Of Indian Diaspora

    1608 Words  | 4 Pages

    "STUDYING DIASPORIC IDENTITY THROUGH INDIAN DIASPORAS" "Displacement has no replacement and this is the reality of diaspora" The dictionary meaning of the term diaspora refers to a large group of people with similar heritage or homeland who have since moved out to all places of the world. The term is derived from an ancient Greek word which means " to scatter

  • Summary Of The Indian Diaspora, By Chira Banerjee Divakaruni

    1690 Words  | 4 Pages

    Chitra Banerjee Divakaruni is a renowned South Asian Diaspora writer with her ancestral roots at Bengal. The women authors of the Indian Diaspora are the artefacts of two cultures; firstly, they are unsure of their status-quo related to the mainstream and secondly in relation to their minority group; because South Asian Diaspora itself constitutes a minority discourse in respect of the canons of globalization, neo-colonialism or ‘melting pot’. Grappling with the problem of defining their identities

  • African Diaspora

    878 Words  | 2 Pages

    African diaspora studies is a academic field of study which combines social sciences, history, academic scholarship, and general intellectual history. The focus of this field is the problems and experiences faced by both African Americans and continental Africans who migrated from their homeland to new territory where opportunity tends to be limited. Many subjects are combined into the field; such as history, art, music, literature, geography, economics, and anthropology. Based on the article African

  • Challenges Of Alienation In The Namesake By Jhumpa Lahiri

    2480 Words  | 5 Pages

    It shall be my endeavour in this research to explore the theme of Indian Postcolonial diaspora, the cultural dislocation and consequent alienation. The paper attempts to re-trace the multiple terrains of cultural and psychological struggle within for the expatriate, the nostalgia accompanied with the expatriate experience and the continuous conflict between past and the present. I also intend to analyse the series of crises the migrants experience in order to seek acceptance in new cultural denominations

  • Asian Diaspora

    1459 Words  | 3 Pages

    Asian Diaspora Asian diaspora, or the personal and cultural implications of leaving one's homeland, is a central and reaccuring theme for Asian American writers. Diaspora is Greek for "the scattering of seeds" (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Diaspora), and its ancient denotation has taken figurative meaning today as a feeling of seperation and detachment. In both Fae Myenne Ng's Bone and Chitra Banerjee Divakaruni's Leaving Yuba City, a thematic thread of "scattered parts", outsiderness, and otherness

  • Namesake Documentary Essay

    1181 Words  | 3 Pages

    Namesake is a documentary of the ongoing quest of identity of the immigrants.. Diasporas often live in one country as community but yearn to reconnect across time and space to their origin. Culturally they experience fragmentation, marginalization and displacement in their migrated countries. There is a threat to their ethnic and cultural identity and often they are victims of mockery and domination. Thus, the diaspora are stuck in their perpetual dilemma of having lost their sense of belonging to

  • Dislocation in Cosmopolis: DeLillo

    1915 Words  | 4 Pages

    William, ed. The American Heritage Dictionary of the English Language. Boston: Houghton Mifflin Harcourt, 1969. Safran, William. “Diasporas in Modern Societies: Myths of Homeland and Return.” Diaspora: A Journal of Transnational Studies. Vol. 1, No. 1 (Spring 1991), pp. 83-99. Vertovec, Steven (1997) ‘Three Meanings of “Diaspora,” Exemplifi ed among South Asian Religions’, Diaspora 6(3): 277–300. Varsava, Jerry A. “The "Saturated Self": Don DeLillo on the Problem of Rogue Capitalism”. Contemporary Literature

  • Before I Die

    1363 Words  | 3 Pages

    countries. They went first to Delhi, arriving with only what they could carry. My father, who was then 5 years old, remembers the tense train journey and the family's difficulties afterward as dispossessed refugees. As adults, my parents joined the Indian diaspora, raising me and my older brother in Sudan, then Abu Dhabi and finally New York. For more than a decade, we have all been Americans. Until that day last November, I had rarely heard Dad speak about the partition. It was a subject I knew I should

  • The Namesake Book Vs Movie

    852 Words  | 2 Pages

    Diaspora all around the world face hardships when they first emigrate to their new home countries, but one such difficulty that is significant to their lives is their name. At first, a name appears to be no more than a simple way of identifying oneself. However, names can have great impacts on people’s lives due to their unseen importance and purpose, as shown in both the novel and film, The Namesake. Both adaptations follow the story of an Indian couple after their immigration to the United States

  • Bharti Mukherjee's Jasmine: An Innovative Diasporic Representation

    2905 Words  | 6 Pages

    generation immigrants tend to cling strenuously together in order to preserve their cultural, religious and linguistic identity. Preserving their identity is one of their chief concerns. (Anand viii) The understanding of migration and existing in a Diaspora have aroused active engagement in Postcolonial literature, criticism and theory. Writers like Buchi Emecheta, Amitav Ghosh, Bharati Mukherjee have become famous in Western literary Criticism whereas theorist like Homi K Bhabha, Paul Gilory, Stuart

  • Belonging and Difference in Imagined Communities

    5847 Words  | 12 Pages

    by faster transportation and the movement and subsequent settlement of peoples across the globe in what has come to be called 'diaspora'. The situation is such that many of the old boundaries and barriers by which nations defined themselves have become less certain, challenged by the increasing power of people to move across them whether literally or figuratively. Diaspora has become a term in academic parlance that is associated with the experience of travel or the introduction of ambiguity into

  • Manhattan Music Analysis

    10959 Words  | 22 Pages

    pride in being more of a Westerner and less of an Indian. Her all works portray the complexities faced by immigrants. She has exceeded boundaries, conveying two different worlds from various viewpoints. In an interview with Morton Marcus, She explained briefly about her writings and

  • Bar Kochba Revolt

    1831 Words  | 4 Pages

    basis of Jews as a nation. To understand the reason for Bar Kochba’s Revolt one must go back many years even before the war. Prior to Hadrian, an emperor by the name of Trajan was the ruler of the Roman empire. Due to the rebellion of the Jews in the Diaspora to the east and the west of them, Trajan, in order to keep the Jews in Palestine from rebelling he had to send a great general to be governor of the Jews in Palestine, a general who was well with the harshness in which he treated people. This general’s

  • Should Women be Ordained in the Pentecostal Churches?

    5587 Words  | 12 Pages

    Should Women be Ordained in the Pentecostal Churches within the African Christian Diaspora? Thesis Statement In this paper, I will describe the ecclesiological problem of women’s ordination from a case study that I observed in Berlin, Germany. I wish to claim that the issue of excluding women from ordination is a result of a sociological contrivance that oppresses women. The churches safeguard the issue under the canopy of theological claims. It is appropriate for the churches, which exclude

  • Edwidge Danticat's Krik? Krak!

    751 Words  | 2 Pages

    in. Although it is a mistake to call the stories autobiographical, Krik? Krak! embodies some of Danticat's experiences as a child. While the collection of stories draw on the oral tradition in Haitian society, it is also part of the literature of diaspora, the great, involuntary migration of Africans from their homeland to other parts of the world; thus, the work speaks of loss and assimilation and resistance. The stories all seem to share similar themes, that one story could be in some way linked

  • Exile In The Kite Runner

    828 Words  | 2 Pages

    “Exile is more than a geographical concept. You can be an exile in your homeland, in your own house, in a room” -Mahmoud Darwish. In “The Kite Runner” by Khaled Hosseini, exile is a prominent obstacle that numerous characters such as Baba, Hassan, Amir, and Sohrab, must overcome. Exile for many people is associated with geography, but it can happen in many instances, such as a certain room or even a person’s own conscience which can cause underlying problems to prevail. In Kabul, Baba is a man

  • Shocking the Sensibilities in A Modest Proposal

    781 Words  | 2 Pages

    the workforce, and landlords abused poor tenants. As miserable as the picture Swift painted of Irish life was, the brushstrokes of history were even harsher. Actions of the English in the previous century had thrust the Irish people into a state of diaspora; tens of thousands had been ... ... middle of paper ... ...al footnote, not something that pertains to the present. Yet we need only look to poor children huddled on the streets of Brazil, or hear accounts of people who have resorted to using

  • Comparing Reflections Of Exile And Bechdel's Fun Home

    1470 Words  | 3 Pages

    Exile, as from a conventional dictionary, is defined as “the state of being barred from one’s native country”. This puissant term is critically elucidated in Edward Said’s Reflections of Exile and Alison Bechdel’s Fun Home by illustrating the idea of being forcefully suppressed from orthodox nature and routine and suddenly being dispatched in unfamiliar territory. Bechdel dissects the relationship between Bruce and herself from the war of confusion and sexual thoughts that engulfs her journey through

  • Barnabas

    991 Words  | 2 Pages

    the Bible? III. Barnabas' introduction of Saul to the apostles IV. His mission work with Paul V. His departure from Paul VI. Barnabas as a writer VII. His Death Barnabas was a native of the island of Cyprus. His birthplace makes him a Jew of the Diaspora, the dispersion of Jews outside Palestine or modern Israel. He was originally named Joseph but the apostles called him Barnabas, he probably acquired this name because of his ability as a preacher. The name Barnabas was understood by Luke to mean