Writing Imagined Diasporas: South Asian Women Reshaping North American Identity

Writing Imagined Diasporas: South Asian Women Reshaping North American Identity book cover

Writing Imagined Diasporas: South Asian Women Reshaping North American Identity

Author(s): Joel Kuortti (Author, Editor)

  • Publisher: Cambridge Scholars Publishing
  • Publication Date: 11 Oct. 2007
  • Edition: 1st
  • Language: English
  • Print length: 198 pages
  • ISBN-10: 1847183425
  • ISBN-13: 9781847183422

Book Description

Joel Kuortti’s Writing Imagined Diasporas: South Asian Women Reshaping North American Identity is a study of diasporic South Asian women writers. It argues that the diasporic South Asians are not merely assimilating to their host cultures but they are also actively reshaping them through their own, new voices bringing new definitions of identity. As diaspora does not emerge as a mere sociological fact but it becomes what it is because it is said to be what it is, the writings of imagined diasporas challenge “national” discourses. Diaspora brings to mind various contested ideas and images. It can be a positive site for the affirmation of an identity, or, conversely, a negative site of fears of losing that identity. Diaspora signals an engagement with a matrix of diversity: of cultures, languages, histories, people, places, times. What distinguishes diaspora from some other types of travel is its centripetal dimension. It does not only mean that people are dispersed in different places but that they congregate in other places, forming new communities. In such gatherings, new allegiances are forged that supplant earlier commitments. New imagined communities arise that not simply substitute old ones but form a hybrid space in-between various identifications. This book looks into the ways in which diasporic Indian literature handles these issues. In the context of diaspora there is an imaginative construction of collective identity in the making, That a given diaspora comes to be seen as a community is the result of a process of imagining, at the same time creating new marginalities, hybridities and dependencies, resulting in multiple marginalizations, hyphenizations and demands for allegiance. The study concentrates on eleven contemporary women writers from the United States and Canada who write on South Asian diasporic experiences. The writers are Ramabai Espinet, Jhumpa Lahiri, Amulya Malladi, Sujata Massey, Bharati Mukherjee, Uma Parameswaran, Kirin Narayan, Anita Rau Badami, Robbie Clipper Sethi, Shauna Singh Baldwin, and Vineeta Vijayaraghavan.

Editorial Reviews

About the Author

Joel Kuortti is Adjunct Professor and lecturer at the University of Jyväskylä as well as a researcher at the University of Joensuu. His current research is on post-colonial theory, post-colonial translation, hybridity, and the diasporic writings of Indian women writing in English. His publications include The Salman Rushdie Bibliography (Lang, 1997), Place of the Sacred (Lang, 1997), Fictions to Live In (Lang, 1998), Indian Women’s Writing in English: A Bibliography (Rawat, 2002) and Tense Past, Tense Present (Stree, 2003). His most recent books are the co-edited anthologies Reconstructing Hybridity: Post-colonial Studies in Transition (co-edited with Jopi Nyman) (Rodopi, 2007) and Indian Women’s Short Fiction (co-edited with Rajeshwar Mittapalli) (Atlantic, 2007).

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