Wednesday, July 31, 2019
Jasmine by Bharati Mukherjee
Kelsey Johnson Dr. Michele levy ENGL 336 April 14, 2013 Weekly Informal Response 1a. ââ¬Å"Kureishiââ¬â¢s articulation of his identity crisis is both an index of the pain of feeling devoid of secure roots, and also something we might use as a pivotal moment when thinking about the creative necessities of migrancy and diasporaâ⬠¦living ââ¬Ëin-betweenââ¬â¢ different nations, ââ¬Ëof, and not ofââ¬â¢ each place, feeling neither here nor there, unable to indulge in sentiments of belonging to either location, defined by others in often unflattering ways. â⬠(Beginning Postcolinalism, p. 47) 1b. The above quote from our theory text describes the feeling of not belonging somewhere due to an identity crisis. This crisis was described as coming from the fact that one was not from a certain region, or may not ââ¬Å"belongâ⬠to the group of that particular region. For example, I may be seen as odd or not belonging in a region full of white Irishmen and they would m ake it known I donââ¬â¢t belong in these said ââ¬Å"unflatteringâ⬠ways. 1c. In the novel Jasmine, she is continuously moving and suffering because of this identity crisis tied to her constant migration.For example, when Jyotiââ¬â¢s first husband is killed she does not do the traditional burning of her own body with her husband; but she moves to Florida. During her travels and attempts to obtain citizenship in America, Jyoti endures the horrible conditions that come with illegal immigration; For example, secrecy, hunger, rape, and even murder. All of this because she ââ¬Ëisnââ¬â¢tââ¬â¢ ofââ¬â¢ this nationâ⬠¦? The text says, ââ¬Å"I wanted to become the person they thought they saw: humorous, intelligent, refined, affectionate. Not illegal, not murderer, not widowed, raped, destitute, fearful.In Flushing, I had lived defensively in the midst of documented rectitude. I did not want to live legally if it also meant living like a refugee. â⬠(Jasmine, p . 171) 2a. ââ¬Å"In this section, we shall consider the extent to which Western feminist discourses are able to address the double colonization of women living in once-colonised societies and in Western locationsâ⬠¦John Thieme has explained that ââ¬ËWestern feminist writers and theorists have frequently seen parallels between their struggles and those of post-colonial women and have particularly identified with women who suffer ââ¬Å"double colonizationâ⬠(BP, p. 06) 2b. The above quote describes the relationship between ââ¬Å"first worldâ⬠and ââ¬Å"third worldâ⬠women. Of course, third world countries are those that exist below the poverty line and struggle to survive. Theime says that feminist writers often see similarities between the lives of their subjects as well as their own. 2c. I believe the entire novel ââ¬Å"Jasmineâ⬠is a prime example of the relationship described above; how feminist writers connect with their subjects and audiences due to ââ¬Å"double colonizationâ⬠.In our novel, Mukherjee writes about the life story of Jyoti and notices similarities in their lives, not because they have the same exact life story, but because of their struggles as women in society. For instance, Jyoti took control of her own life and created her own destiny (despite starting over several times); also because she is a woman and isnââ¬â¢t expected to have much control over her own life. This is also shown in other novels weââ¬â¢ve read. 3a. These ââ¬Å"in-betweenâ⬠spaces provide the terrain of elaborating strategies of selfhood ââ¬â singular or communal ââ¬â that initiate new signs of ââ¬Ëidentityââ¬â¢Ã¢â¬ ¦ Bhabha also opposes the idea of a sovereign or essentialised subject. For Bhabha and Spivak identity is a discursive product. Second, because subjectivity is discursively produced, it is possible for it to be remade and remodeled in new and innovative ways ââ¬â hence his attention to the pro cesses of ââ¬Ëarticulationââ¬â¢ and ââ¬Ëelaborationââ¬â¢ in the quotation. The border is a place of possibility and agency for new concepts, new narratives, new ideas.Third, the new ââ¬Ësignsââ¬â¢ of identity which are possible impact upon both individuals and groups. â⬠(BP, p. 252) 3b&c. The above quote speaks about the crossing of physical borders and how they coincide with the crossing of imaginary borders within oneself. For instance, when a person moves from one geographical location to another, they seem to move from one persona to another. This was DEFINITELY seen throughout the novel Jasmine. As the narrator moved, she changed identities and personalities.
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