How to Be South Asian in America: Narratives of Ambivalence and Belonging
ISBN: 9781439903049
Platform/Publisher: JSTOR / Temple University Press
Digital rights: Users: unlimited; Printing: chapter; Download: chapter
Subjects: South Asian Americans -- Cultural assimilation; South Asian Americans -- Ethnic identity; Americanization;

Providing a useful analysis of and framework for understanding immigration and assimilation narratives, anupama jain's How to Be South Asian in America considers the myth of the American Dream in fiction (Meena Alexander's Manhattan Music ), film ( American Desi, American Chai ), and personal testimonies. By interrogating familiar American stories in the context of more supposedly exotic narratives, jain illuminates complexities of belonging that also reveal South Asians' anxieties about belonging, (trans)nationalism, and processes of cultural interpenetration.

jain argues that these stories transform as well as reflect cultural processes, and she shows just how aspects of identity--gender, sexual, class, ethnic, national--are shaped by South Asians' accommodation of and resistance to mainstream American culture.


anupama jain has taught at the University of Wisconsin-Madison, Union College, and Colby College. Her main academic interests are Anglophone and American narrative, postcolonial theory, utopianism, and social justice.

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