Unreal Homes: Belonging and Becoming in Indian Women Narratives

In an epoch which has to do fundamentally with space, the concept of home has entered the epistemic scene, both as a commodity and a discursive formation. Contemporary Indian women writers, who are a major facet of present Anglophone literature, have often chosen the domestic sphere as the structura...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Sofia Cavalcanti
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: MDPI AG 2018-12-01
Series:Humanities
Subjects:
Online Access:https://www.mdpi.com/2076-0787/7/4/133
Description
Summary:In an epoch which has to do fundamentally with space, the concept of home has entered the epistemic scene, both as a commodity and a discursive formation. Contemporary Indian women writers, who are a major facet of present Anglophone literature, have often chosen the domestic sphere as the structural framework of their stories. However, despite the traditional idea of home as a static physical site where women&#8217;s lives unfold, a more complex and fluid concept emerges from their narratives. After discussing conflicting definitions of home both as a site of belonging and becoming, I will provide a comparative analysis of the short story <i>Mrs. Sen&#8217;s</i> by Jhumpa Lahiri and the novel <i>Ladies&#8217; Coup&#233;</i> by Anita Nair. By looking at the transitional spaces inhabited by the women protagonists&#8212;respectively, the diasporic space in the U.S. and a train car in India&#8212;I will show how home is a psychic-inhabited place taking shape in memory, imagination, and desire. In conclusion, home is an unreal site at the core of women&#8217;s subjectivities, transcending the physicality of the homeland or the household and assuming a metonymic significance. Its inward or outward-moving force gives birth to &#8220;homeworlds&#8222; made of liminal paths where new possibilities of identity construction are produced.
ISSN:2076-0787