Disease and Creativity in the Diasporic City: A Gendered View on Two Atypical Transnational Novels

Author:

Cavalcanti Sofia1

Affiliation:

1. Department of Humanities, University of Macerata, 62100 Macerata, Italy

Abstract

The topographical turn in literary and cultural studies has shed new light on the deeply symbolic significance of the natural and urban places where stories unfold. This focus on spatiality is particularly evident in the South Asian literature by contemporary women writers, where locations acquire a personality and significantly contribute to the shaping of gender identities. Although most of these narratives portray female protagonists who develop strategies of resistance and sisterhood within traditional domestic spaces, the widely praised transnational novels Brick Lane and The Mistress of Spices show that women can also achieve independence and self-realization in the bustling urban environment. Drawing on cultural geography as well as gender and social studies, this essay argues that the global dimension of the city offers diasporic women the opportunity to forge new empowered selves in the above-mentioned books. First, the article maintains that London and Oakland, CA, where the main characters live, exert a centripetal force on women, thus triggering change and mobility, both in physical and psychical terms. Second, it claims that the two cities are gendered “heterotopias”, i.e., heterogeneous spaces where border-crossing women, like those featured in the two novels at hand, can overcome alienation and develop creativity, resilience, and self-confidence. In conclusion, urban spaces serve as “safe houses” for immigrant women, where they can cure their emotional and physical diseases and become figures of adaptive hybridity.

Publisher

MDPI AG

Reference57 articles.

1. Unbraiding Tradition: An Interview with Chitra Divakaruni;Aldama;Journal of South Asian Literature,2000

2. Ali, Monica (2003). Brick Lane, Doubleday.

3. Badami Rau, Anita (2011). Tell It To The Trees, Vintage Canada.

4. “Into a Horizon I Will Not Recognize”: Female Identity and Transitional Space Aboard Nair’s Ladies Coupé;Bausman;Iowa Journal of Cultural Studies,2014

5. Berensmeyer, Ingo, and Ehland, Cristoph (2013). Subjective Spaces—Spatial Subjectivities: Movement and Mobility in Monica Ali’s Brick Lane and Ia McEwan’s Saturday. Perspectives on Mobility, Editions Rodopi.

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