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Year 2023, Issue: 37, 1261 - 1270, 21.12.2023
https://doi.org/10.29000/rumelide.1406008

Abstract

References

  • Afshar, H., Aitken, R., & Franks, M. (2006). Islamophobia and women of Pakistani descent in Bradford: The crisis of ascribed and adopted identities. In H. Moghissi (Ed.), Muslim diaspora: Gender, culture and identity (pp. 167-183). Routledge.
  • Ali, M. (2004). Brick Lane. Black Swan.
  • Chattopadhyay, S. & Shrivastava, J. (2012). Monica Ali’s Brick Lane and Tishani Doshi’s The Pleasure Seekers. Asiatic, 6(1), 113-125.
  • Cormack, A. (2006). Migration and the politics of narrative form: Realism and the postcolonial subject in Brick Lane. Contemporary Literature. 47(4), 695-721.
  • Çelikel, M. A. (2022). Traumatised immigrant: Monica Ali’s Brick Lane. Çankaya University Journal of Humanities and Social Sciences. 16(2), 169-180.
  • Dhar, R. (2007). Women and international migration: A cross-cultural analysis. Centre for Research on Nationalism. https://www.academia.edu/2856082/Women_and_International_Migration _A_Cross_cultural_Analysis.
  • Fernández, I. P. (2009). Representing third spaces, fluid identities and contested spaces in contemporary British Literature. Atlantis, 31(2), 143-160.
  • Fouron, G., & Schiller, N. G. (2001). All in the family: Gender, transnational migration, and the nation‐state. Identities, 7(4), 539-582.
  • King, B. (2004). Brick Lane. World Literature Today, 78(3/4), 91.
  • Macmillan, M. (2018). Women of the Raj [eBook Edition]. New ed. London: Thames & Hudson.
  • Mahler, S. J., & Patricia R. P. (2001). Gendered geographies of power: Analyzing gender across transnational spaces. Identities, 7(4), 441-459.
  • Marx, J. (2006). The feminization of globalization. Cultural Critique, 63(1), 1-32.
  • Moggach, D. (1982). Hot Water Man. Penguin.
  • Nath, I. (2022). Memsahibs: British Women in Colonial India [eBook edition]. Hurst & Company.
  • Pereira-Ares, N. (2012). The east looks at the west, the woman looks at the man: A study of the gaze in Brick Lane by Monica Ali. Miscelánea: A Journal of English and American Studies, 46, 71-84.
  • Pessar, P.R., and Mahler, S. J. (2003). Transnational migration: Bringing gender in. International Migration Review, 37(3), 812-846.
  • Spivak, G. C. (2010). Can the subaltern speak. In R. C. Morris (Ed.) Can the subaltern speak?: Reflections on the history of an idea. (pp. 237-291) Colombia University Press.

Woman, here and there: Transnational struggles of Nazneen in Brick Lane by Monica Ali and Christine in Hot Water Man by Deborah Moggach

Year 2023, Issue: 37, 1261 - 1270, 21.12.2023
https://doi.org/10.29000/rumelide.1406008

Abstract

Paralleling globalisation, wars, social and economic insecurities, and the desire for a better life push people to cross those borders. The case of postcolonial migration between the former colonies and Great Britain tells a different story of border crossing. Although the physical borders are open for the newcomer, the psychological and social borders are hard to cross. In this regard, the migrants manage to cross these unseen borders through their fluid transnational identities. This fluidity enables them to carry on their background while passing the other side. However, it is clear that the experiences of the migrant as a woman are far more different and precarious. In Brick Lane, Monica Ali depicts the lives of migrant Bangladeshi women who live in Brick Lane, London, and provides versatile pictures of different experiences. Nazneen is the main character, whose transnational identity helps to transgress the boundaries between the host culture and her origin. Throughout the novel, she transforms from a shy, insecure immigrant young girl to a strong and self-confident woman with a fluid transnational identity. On the other hand, in Hot Water Man, Deborah Moggach presents a reverse migration from Great Britain to Pakistan and depicts Christine’s struggle to cross borders and gain a transnational identity. Although they share the difficulties of being a woman in the host culture, their experiences differ because of their positions and the representation of their background as a former coloniser and colonised. This study aims to examine the experiences of these two women, Nazneen and Christine, while crossing the invisible borders in their journeys to gain transnational identities.

References

  • Afshar, H., Aitken, R., & Franks, M. (2006). Islamophobia and women of Pakistani descent in Bradford: The crisis of ascribed and adopted identities. In H. Moghissi (Ed.), Muslim diaspora: Gender, culture and identity (pp. 167-183). Routledge.
  • Ali, M. (2004). Brick Lane. Black Swan.
  • Chattopadhyay, S. & Shrivastava, J. (2012). Monica Ali’s Brick Lane and Tishani Doshi’s The Pleasure Seekers. Asiatic, 6(1), 113-125.
  • Cormack, A. (2006). Migration and the politics of narrative form: Realism and the postcolonial subject in Brick Lane. Contemporary Literature. 47(4), 695-721.
  • Çelikel, M. A. (2022). Traumatised immigrant: Monica Ali’s Brick Lane. Çankaya University Journal of Humanities and Social Sciences. 16(2), 169-180.
  • Dhar, R. (2007). Women and international migration: A cross-cultural analysis. Centre for Research on Nationalism. https://www.academia.edu/2856082/Women_and_International_Migration _A_Cross_cultural_Analysis.
  • Fernández, I. P. (2009). Representing third spaces, fluid identities and contested spaces in contemporary British Literature. Atlantis, 31(2), 143-160.
  • Fouron, G., & Schiller, N. G. (2001). All in the family: Gender, transnational migration, and the nation‐state. Identities, 7(4), 539-582.
  • King, B. (2004). Brick Lane. World Literature Today, 78(3/4), 91.
  • Macmillan, M. (2018). Women of the Raj [eBook Edition]. New ed. London: Thames & Hudson.
  • Mahler, S. J., & Patricia R. P. (2001). Gendered geographies of power: Analyzing gender across transnational spaces. Identities, 7(4), 441-459.
  • Marx, J. (2006). The feminization of globalization. Cultural Critique, 63(1), 1-32.
  • Moggach, D. (1982). Hot Water Man. Penguin.
  • Nath, I. (2022). Memsahibs: British Women in Colonial India [eBook edition]. Hurst & Company.
  • Pereira-Ares, N. (2012). The east looks at the west, the woman looks at the man: A study of the gaze in Brick Lane by Monica Ali. Miscelánea: A Journal of English and American Studies, 46, 71-84.
  • Pessar, P.R., and Mahler, S. J. (2003). Transnational migration: Bringing gender in. International Migration Review, 37(3), 812-846.
  • Spivak, G. C. (2010). Can the subaltern speak. In R. C. Morris (Ed.) Can the subaltern speak?: Reflections on the history of an idea. (pp. 237-291) Colombia University Press.
There are 17 citations in total.

Details

Primary Language English
Subjects British and Irish Language, Literature and Culture
Journal Section World languages, cultures and litertures
Authors

Ayşen Demir Kılıç This is me 0000-0001-6270-8643

Publication Date December 21, 2023
Submission Date October 25, 2023
Acceptance Date December 20, 2023
Published in Issue Year 2023 Issue: 37

Cite

APA Demir Kılıç, A. (2023). Woman, here and there: Transnational struggles of Nazneen in Brick Lane by Monica Ali and Christine in Hot Water Man by Deborah Moggach. RumeliDE Dil Ve Edebiyat Araştırmaları Dergisi(37), 1261-1270. https://doi.org/10.29000/rumelide.1406008