Reinventing the Self in Bharati Mukherjee's Jasmine

Authors

  • Radha Devi Sharma

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.3126/ctbijis.v4i1.18427

Keywords:

Identity crisis, alienation, diaspora, adoptation and assimilation

Abstract

Bharati Mukherjee’s Jasmine is a story of a young Punjabi woman named Jasmine whose life takes her from India to the United States, where she goes through many different destinies with her effort to reinvent her coherent self. Searching for and defining a new identity is a central question for immigrants living in a foreign land. The confusion of identity and cultural conflict pushes the immigrants into an identity crisis. The novel exposes how Jasmine, the female protagonist, as an outsider, strives to shape her identity to fit in the mainstream American society. Fortunately, she encounters confirmations of her shifting identity in different stages of her life. Instead of rejecting these identities and names in various phases, she seeks to create a harmonious relationship with those identities. In this context, this paper tries to explore on how she struggles throughout her life to reinvent the coherent self by her constant effort to assimilate to the alien culture and setting.

Crossing the Border: International Journal of Interdisciplinary Studies Vol.4(1) 2016: 29-38

Downloads

Download data is not yet available.
Abstract
3769
PDF
6846

Author Biography

Radha Devi Sharma

Radha Devi Sharma has been working as a Lecturer of English at Tribhuvan University, Prithvi Narayan Campus, Pokhara since 24 December 2007. She has received her MA in English from Tribhuvan University and MPhil in English from IACER, Kathmandu. She has published research articles on topics related to literature, culture and literary theories in various journals.

Downloads

Published

2017-10-17

How to Cite

Sharma, R. D. (2017). Reinventing the Self in Bharati Mukherjee’s Jasmine. Crossing the Border: International Journal of Interdisciplinary Studies, 4(1), 29–38. https://doi.org/10.3126/ctbijis.v4i1.18427

Issue

Section

Articles