Abstract:
The word culture has been derived from Latin word 'cultura' originally meaning
'cultivation of agriculture'. But after 1500, it also meant ' cultivation through
education'. Since 1805, it meant 'intellectual side of civilization,' and after 1865,
'collective customs and achievements of people'. Thus, it has multifaceted meanings,
being an integrated and powerful tool of human existence. It is a dynamic and shifting
phenomenon pertaining to many dimensions: the codes of manners, dresses, language,
music, art, literature, tradition, belief, custom, religion, and various social rituals.
Naturally, it is a seminal mental attitude, working internally, but with important
outside manifestations.
The word 'class' has been derived from the Latin word 'classis' that means a
system or mechanism that divides members of the society into sets based on social
and economic status. Conflict is the word that has come from Latin origin 'conflictus'
meaning difference of opinion or oppositional views resulting into internal or/and
external combat or quarrel. Thus, conflict of class and culture means oppositional
tension between socially and economically unequal groups, or between culturally
different sets of people with different customs and beliefs.
Cultures are embedded in most of the conflicts, because conflicts basically
arise in human relationships. Cultures relate to our mental and psychological feelings
linking us to others. While class-conflict has more of outward manifestation, cultural
conflict is largely a matter of inward tension. But in a society, both the conflicts criss
cross each other.
The names of Jhumpa Lahiri and Kiran Desai, the two significant Indian
diasporic writers, are well known in the English-speaking world. They are more than
immigrant writers, who have successfully portrayed the drama of conflicts of class
and culture that create tussle and trauma, pain and suffering, alienation and anxieties,
in the minds of all the Diasporas settled in different lands, specially in the West, far
away from the original native countries.
It is to be seen how Jhumpa Lahiri and Kiran Desai, the two post-colonial Indian
diasporic novelists, could feel the conflict of class and culture in the minds of all the
people of Diaspora school and have reflected their spirits in their respective literary
works.
Objectives: The objectives ofthis study are the following:
I. To explore conflict of class and culture in the works of two celebrated
writers, namely Jhumpa Lahiri and Kiran Desai.
II. To find out the reasons behind these conflicts in the life of characters as
depicted in the novels and short stories of these two authors, and their
literary transformation.
III. To explore the creative suggestions of the novelists studied, for the
possible resolution ofconflicts in the lives of humans separated by time,
distance and culture.
The thesis has been divided into five chapters. The first chapter gives a brief
introduction of two writers, their works, and various critical books and essays written
on them. Jhumpa Lahiri is an American author of Bengali Indian descent. Lahiri's
debut short story collection, Interpreter ofMaladies (1999), won the Pulitzer Prize for
fiction, and her first novel, The Namesake (2003), was adapted into a popular film.
Her latest work Unaccustomed Earth (2008) is a collection ofeight short stories.
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Lahiri's writing is characterized by her plain but effective language for the
readers, making them understand her works easily. Her characters, often Indian
immigrants to America, navigate between the cultural values of their birthplace and
adopted home. Lahiri's fiction has autobiographical echoes and it frequently draws
upon her own experiences as well as those of her parents, friends and others in
Bengali community, which she is familiar with.
Kiran Desai is the daughter of Anita Desai and a permanent resident of the
United States. Her novel, The Inheritance of Loss, won the 2006 Man Booker Prize
and National Book Critic's Circle Fiction award. Her first novel, Hullabaloo in the
Guava Orchard, was published in 1998. Desai's mindscape is multi-cultural because
of her family. She is keenly aware of inequality among immigrants, whose
rootlessness has itself become both a kind of shelter and a form of conflict. This
chapter also explores the existing criticism on these two authors and explains the need
for this fresh study.
The second chapter makes an exhaustive study of Jhumpa Lahiri's works and
attempts to explore the conflict of class and culture in them. Jhumpa Lahiri's The
Namesake is a novel that sees two generations of an Indian born American family that
explores generational, cultural, and class conflicts simultaneously. Lahiri skilfully
explores the theme of multiple complexities in the life of immigrants created out of
the conflicts of class and culture. Both Interpreter of Maladies and The Namesake
contain the elements of conflict in relationship between couples, families, and friends.
Through these relationships, Lahiri explores ideas of isolation at personal, social, and
cultural levels. Throughout The Namesake, Jhumpa Lahiri uses even food and
dressing habits to explore cultural conflicts, especially rituals like, the annaprasana
i.e. the rice ceremony. Gogol's naming in this novel is a case of cultural compromise.
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Shifting from India, the Bengali couple finds American culture different from
that of India. Ashima's son is so named because her grandmother couldn't send the
name on time. Children too find it difficult to accommodate between two divergent
cultures: one at home and the other outside. Interpreter of Maladies is a collection of
nine short stories, which reflects the conflict of characters in various situations. It won
the Pulitzer award for fiction and the Hemingway award. The stories are about the
lives of Indians and Indian Americans both in the USA and during their visits to India.
The Namesake is a cross- cultural, multigenerational story of a Hindu Bengali
family's journey to self- acceptance in Boston. Lahiri underlines the subtleties of the
immigrant experience full of alienation, the clash of lifestyles, cultural disorientation,
and the problem of assimilation. Unaccustomed Earth, the second collection of short
stories by Lahiri, carries forward the same conflict of class and culture with much
more maturity. Out of these conflicts, Lahiri presents gripping narratives to make
readers glued to her works.
The third chapter ofthe thesis makes an evaluation ofthe conflict ofclass and
culture in the works ofKiran Desai. Kiran Desai published her first novel, Hullabaloo
in the Guava Orchard, in 1998. It's a fun-filled tale of a useless youth, who refuses to
descend from his perch in a tree and comes to be treated as a sage. The novel
introduces the sleepy town ofShahkot, which becomes alive when Sampath Chawla, a
lower middle-class purposeless post-office clerk, tries to escape from his repeated
failures by climbing aguava tree and gaining recognition as amonkey baba. It reflects
the conflict between the divergent expectations of individual and society based on
class. Individual's escape is taken as society's achievement, making even intellectuals
proud of the emergence of a new avatar. The novel is also a cultural dig at Indian
superstitious belief seen in the Western light ofreasoning.
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Kiran Desai's second novel, The Inheritance ofLoss, is the product of multi
cultural setting as well as ethnic revolt and class conflict, and even ethnic revolt based
on economic inequality. Desai exhaustively touches upon many different issues, such
as globalization, multiculturalism, cultural conflict, things that touch even the lovelife
of her characters. The conflict between the retired judge Jemubhai Patel and his
cook starts when the judge's grand- daughter, Sai comes to live with him. Also central
to the story are, Gyan, Sai's Nepali tutor, and Biju, the cook's son, who has travelled
to America in the hope of making money and to rescue his father from servitude. The
central conflict of the novel hinges on the Nepalese struggle to gain their rightful
place in India; in a way, their adopted country. While Gyan and the insurgents are
fighting a battle for their rights in India, Biju the cook's son, is shown fighting for his
own survival in the U.S.
The fourth chapter makes a comparative analysis of conflicts in both the
writers. Comparative study also involves contrasts. Both Jhumpa Lahiri and Kiran
Desai have Indian roots and both of them, after receiving education abroad, adopted
USA as their country. Therefore, there are lots of similarities as well as dissimilarities
in their mental outlook and their perception of the world. The present chapter shows a
comparative analysis of the characters in the works of the two novelists, keeping into
consideration conflicts of culture and class. The migrant experience in Jhumpa Lahiri
is largely of the elite class except that of Boori Ma in one of the stories of Interpreter
ofMaladies. But characters of Kiran Desai are largely poor people except Jemubhai,
whose feelings in India are that of an Anglophile after his return from England to his
country. The nature of conflict keeps changing from personal to societal, and from
local to global levels.
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The fifth chapter gives the conclusion of the present study. From the above
analysis I have concluded that clash arising out of both class and culture is pervasive
in the works of Jhumpa Lahiri and Kiran Desai. There are a lot of common
experiences in the backgrounds of both Jhumpa Lahiri and Kiran Desai. There are
similarities in diasporic atmosphere of their novels and short stories. But the conflict
among their characters is deeper than apparent diasporic experience. The disparity in
prosperity levels creates its own conflict as is evident in the characters of the cook,
Biju, and Gyan in Kiran Desai and Boori Ma in Jhumpa Lahiri. In addition to class
conflict, there are cultural conflicts too. Conflicts mainly arise because of the
mingling of different characters from different countries as well as mingling of
characters within the same community having different mindsets. Conflict is not
negative in nature. It raises our consciousness and prompts us to find ways to
accommodate and adjust in a multicultural world. We belong to a particular culture,
though we should strive to accept cultural differences too. Man, after all, should
follow vasudeva kutumbakam (entire world as one family) as motto in a post modern,
post colonial globalised world.