August 2024

Volume 07 Issue 08 August 2024
Identity Transformation among Diasporic Women Characters in Americanah
1Roghaiyeh Lotfi Matanagh, 2Bahram Behin, 3Hossein Sabouri
1M.A in English Language and Literature, Azarbaijan Shahid Madani University, Tabriz, Iran,
2Associate Professor of English Literature, Department of English Language and Literature, Faculty of Literature and Humanities, Azarbaijan Shahid Madani University, Tabriz, Iran,
3Associate Professor of English Literature, Department of English Language and Literature, Faculty of Persian Literature and Foreign Languages, Tabriz University, Tabriz, Iran,
DOI : https://doi.org/10.47191/ijsshr/v7-i08-91

Google Scholar Download Pdf
ABSTRACT

This article scrutinizes the impact of hybridity, cultural identity, and diaspora on the self-identity of African women immigrants and their interactions with others in Chimamanda Ngozi Adichie’s Americanah (2013), and NoViolet Bulawayo’s We Need New Names (2013). The overarching argument of this article is that the African women, who immigrate to America, demonstrate self-identity through milieus, such as language, dressing, food, relationships, mannerisms, and physical appearance before and after immigration. The nature of this narrative research is qualitative and employs the post-colonial concepts of Homi Bhabha’s hybridity, Stuart Hall’s cultural identity, and William Safran’s diaspora. The African diasporic authors, namely Adichie and Bulawayo portray the women characters who emigrate from Africa to America. Americanah and We Need New Names have been selected due to the existence of the omnipresent peculiarities, such as immigration of the African women characters to America whose movements oscillate between both spaces and their identity transformation. This article tries to fill the existing gap by illuminating how the African women immigrants’ identity oscillates between both pre-immigration and post-immigration spaces, Africa and America, respectively. When African women characters engage with settings of the American diaspora, their identities change as a result. The article's findings show that there is a notable difference in how African women characters' self-identities are portrayed before and after they immigrated to America. This difference is primarily due to the fact that adoption or rejection of a new self-identity is influenced by a number of factors. It also shows how African diasporic women's altered sense of self influences how they relate to American society as well as the society of their origin.

KEYWORDS:

Hybridity, Immigration, Cultural Identity, Diaspora, Identity Transformation

REFERENCES

1) Adichie, C. N. (2013). Americanah. Alfred A. Knopf.

2) Ajayi, A. (2014). “Of Race, Reasons and Realities: Americanah by Chimamanda

3) Ngozi Adichie.” Academia.edu, a. www.academia.edu/7167954/REVIEW_OF_AMERICANAH_BY_CHIMAMA NDA _NGOZI_ADICHIE.

4) Ashcroft, B. (1995). The Post-Colonial Studies Reader. Routledge.

5) Berkhout, I. (2012). Women and Wardrobes: An Ethnographic Study of Women and their Clothes. Leiden University, MA Thesis.

6) Bhabha, H. K. (1994). The Location of Culture. Routledge.

7) Bulawayo, Noviolet. We Need New Names. Little, Brown and Company, 2014. PDF file.

8) ---. (1990). “The Third Space.” In Jonathan Rutherford, Lawrence & Wishart Ltd. (Eds.), Identity: Community, Culture, Difference. (pp. 207-221).

9) Chapman, Y. M. (2007). I am Not My Hair! Or Am I?: Black Women’s

10) Transformative Experience in their Self Perceptions of Abroad and at Home. Georgia State University, MA Thesis, www.scholarworks.gsu.edu/anthro_theses/23.

11) Dobson, A. (2002). “Who am I? Self- Identity – Building Personal Character.” Hypnosis Articles and Information, www.mindfithypnosis.com/who-am-i-self-identity.

12) Ghandeharion, A., & Shirin S. F. (2017). “Homi Bhabha and Iranian-American

13) Literature of Diaspora: Is Firoozeh Dumas’s Funny in Farsi Postcolonially Funny?”. Forum for World Literature Studies, 9(3), 489-504.

14) Hall, S. (1990). “Cultural Identity and Diaspora.” In Jonathan Rutherford, Lawrence & Wishart Ltd. (Eds.), Identity: Community, Culture, Difference. (pp. 222-237).

15) Jones, O. E. M. (2013). Anglophone West African Women in the United States. University of North Carolina at Greensboro, PhD Thesis, www.libres.uncg.edu/ir/uncg/f/Jones_uncg_0154D_11146.pdf.

16) Kistnareddy, O. A. (2010). Hybridity in the Novels of Ananda Devi. University of Nottingham, MA Thesis.

17) Koelsch, D. C. (2018). “Voices of Concern, Voices of Hope: Experiences of African Immigrants in Detroit.” University of Detroit Mercy School of Law, www.law.berkeley.edu.

18) Leitch, V. B. (Ed.). (2001). The Norton Anthology of Theory and Criticism. W.W. Norton & Company.

19) Maier, A. (2013). Ben Okri: Between Reality and Fantasy. Babes-Bolyai University, PhD Thesis.

20) Moji, Polo Belina. “New Names, Translational Subjectivities: (Dis)location and (Re)naming in NoViolet Bulawayo’s We Need New Names.” Journal of African Cultural Studies.Carfax Publishing Ltd., 2015, pp. 1-10, www.tandfonline.com. PDF download.

21) Ngwira, E. M. (2013). Writing Marginality: History, Authorship and Gender in the Fiction of Zoë Wicomb and Chimamanda Ngozi Adichie. Stellenbosch University, PhD Thesis.

22) Okonofua, B. A. (2013). “I Am Blacker Than You: Theorizing Conflict Between African Immigrants and African Americans in the United States.” SAGE Open Publication, 1-14, www.sgo.sagepub.com.

23) Roach-Higgins, Mary E., & Joanne B. E. (1992). “Dress and Identity.” Clothing and Textiles Research Journal, 10(1), 1-8,www.conservancy.umn.edu/bitstream/handle/11299/162438/Dress%20and%20identit y.pdf?sequence=1&isAllowed=y.

24) Safran, W. (1991). “Diasporas in Modern Society: Myths of Homeland and Return.” Diaspora: A Journal of Transnational Studies. 1(1), 83-99. www.muse.jhu.edu.

25) Tunca, D. (2010). “Of French Fries and Cookies: Chimamanda Ngozi Adichie’s Diasporic Short Fiction.” African Presence in Europe and Beyond. 291-309. www.core.ac.uk/reader/13314230.

26) Yerima, D. (2017). “Regimentation or Hybridity? Western Beauty Practices by Black Women in Adichie’s Americanah.” Journal of Black Studies. 48(7), 639-650. a. www.journals.sagepub.com/home/jbs.
Volume 07 Issue 08 August 2024

Indexed In

Avatar Avatar Avatar Avatar Avatar Avatar Avatar Avatar Avatar Avatar Avatar Avatar Avatar Avatar Avatar Avatar