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Suniti Namjoshi | Anandi Rao

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Introduction

Suniti Namjoshi (1941–) is one of the foremost queer diasporic Indian writers in English. As Anannya Dasgupta puts it, “Namjoshi’s experience of the diaspora as an Indian lesbian puts her through a threefold marginalization so that she develops what she calls the ‘Asian perspective,’ the ‘alien perspective,’ and, later, the ‘lesbian perspective’ (22)” (Dasgupta 100). Namjoshi was born into a “highly influential Chitpavan Brahmin family of Pune” (Vijayasree 23). As a young adult she qualified for the Indian Administrative Services because it seemed to her that it was her “only chance of being somebody in my own right and gaining some independence from the family” (Namjoshi, Because of India 7). In 1969, she left her job and moved to Canada to pursue a PhD in English literature. She subsequently lived and worked in Canada for several years before moving to the UK, where she currently lives. There are two people she met in the UK whose significance is worth pointing out.

In 1978–79 during her sabbatical in the UK, Namjoshi met Christine Donald who began to “politicize” her. Namjoshi writes of this meeting in one of the autobiographical vignettes in Because of India (78), ruminating, “what isn’t clear to me is why I wasn’t influenced by Feminism earlier” (78). She goes on to say that “I hadn’t properly understood the structures of Western society, or even of my own” (78). This statement suggests that the fact that Namjoshi came to “feminism” late was due to her privileged upbringing, but also due to the fact that feminism in the West, at that time, often meant “white feminism”. The second significant person is Gillian Hanscombe, whom Namjoshi met at the International Feminist Book Fair in London in June 1984. They wrote poems to each other between 1984 and 1986, and these were eventually published in the collection Flesh and Paper (1986). Namjoshi describes this book as “a dialogue” where “two lesbians are trying to understand what kind of sense the world makes to a lesbian consciousness, and in the very process of writing are trying to deal with the fact that language creates worlds” (Because of India 113). Namjoshi and Hanscombe live together in the UK.

Namjoshi’s point about language creating “worlds” is an important one in thinking about the “worlds” she creates. These worlds are, after all, rendered in English. In an interview with Olga Kenyon, published in 1992, Namjoshi is asked about why she did not write in her “mother tongue.” Her answer is illuminating: “It may not be my mother tongue, but I was brought up speaking English, and sent to an English-medium school. I couldn’t write in my mother tongue, even if I’d wanted to, because I’ve only used it for simple conversations” (Kenyon 112). This presents an interesting paradox, an experience that is common for several Indian writers in English: English is the language one is most comfortable in, and yet it is not considered to be one’s mother tongue, despite being the language one thinks and writes in. As Namjoshi puts it in an interview with C. Vijayasree, “The Indian cultural context is extraordinarily dense, but the language one thinks in also carries with it the weight of a strong cultural tradition (and in this case a different tradition)” (Vijayasree 176). This also reflects a divide between the realm of the written and the oral. Serena Guarracino analyses this divide in relation to Namjoshi’s work in the Indian Administrative Service. Guarracino notes that

her inability to read and write in her mother tongue marks the chasm between herself and the people she deals with as Assistant Collector, forcing her to admit the schism between her oral mother-tongue, Marathi, and the languages in which she had been taught to read and write, English and Hindi. As a consequence, in Namjoshi’s early writing the unnamed mother tongue is an impalpable entity, strangled between the two master tongues of English and Hindi . . . . Quite uncommonly for the Indo-English context, here Hindi is the language of authority and exploitation (the language used with servants), while English is the language of socialization and learning: both English and Hindi are experienced as master languages, marking the privileged position not of the British colonizer, but of the Indian government official. (Guarracino 135)

I cite Guarracino at length because of the three important points she makes. First, Hindi and English are acknowledged as “master” tongues. Second, the fact that knowing how to read and write only in the master tongues marks both a position of privilege—caste, class, linguistic—but it also entails a loss, an absence. Third, this absence is an “unnamed” and “impalpable entity,” whose presence lingers in the background. It is worth bearing in mind that the position of privilege shifts as Namjoshi moves into a diasporic space where she is othered—as an Indian and as a lesbian. From this perspective she has created a vast oeuvre of poetry, prose, and other writings. In the rest of this essay, I focus on two main areas of Namjoshi’s oeuvre: her engagement with the western canon through her re-writings of The Tempest, and her engagement with Hindu mythology and the symbol of the cow.

Re-interpreting The Tempest in Snapshots of Caliban and Sycorax

William Shakespeare’s The Tempest was first performed in 1611. Since the 1960s the “colonial implications of the play” have become more and more apparent for viewers and readers (Singh 24). This has led to several postcolonial reimaginings of the play, many of which center the figure of Caliban. Most notable amongst these are Aimé Césaire’s Une Tempête (A Tempest, 1969) and E.P. Kamau Brathwaite’s poem “Caliban” from his collection Islands (1969), which focus on Caliban as the male colonized subject vis-à-vis Prospero, the European colonizer. In “Snapshots of Caliban,” published in the collection From the Bedside Book of Nightmares (1984), Namjoshi complicates this configuration by “recasting Shakespeare’s character as a Third World lesbian subject. Concomitantly, she reimagines Miranda as a desirous and murderous homoerotic figure and Prospero as the excluded and, finally, defeated patriarch” (Mann 100).

Namjoshi returns to The Tempest in her poem “Sycorax” published in a volume titled, Sycorax: New Fables and Poems (2006). In the “Letter to the Reader” that opens this volume, she describes the poem as follows: “In Shakespeare’s The Tempest, Sycorax is already dead when Prospero and Miranda arrive on the island. The Sycorax in my poem is still alive and has returned to the island after Prospero and the others have left. She is still defiant, still fierce but she knows that death is no longer so far away that it need not be thought of” (Namjoshi xi). While “Snapshots of Caliban” focuses on Caliban, Miranda, and Prospero, “Sycorax” centers around Sycorax and Ariel, and only occasionally references Prospero and Caliban (Shakespeare’s characters, not Namjoshi’s). The “Prologue” of the poem “Sycorax” is a powerful feminist critique of The Tempest:
Old women do not die easily, nor
are their deaths timely. They make a habit
of outliving men, so that, as I’m still here,
I’m able to say clearly that when Prospero
said he took over an uninhabited island
save for Caliban and the enslaved
Ariel, he lied.
I LIVED ON THAT ISLAND
It was my property (at least as much
as it was anybody else’s). He
drove me away, made himself king, set up
his props and bided his time.
Now that they’ve gone
I may return, and ask myself, not who
they were, but who I was and what I mourn.
There’s greenery left, a clear stream or two,
and Ariel, perhaps, checking his reflection
in yet another pool. Caliban’s gone,
went with the gods who were only men. It’s
what he deserves. He wanted so much
to be just like them.
What is my task?
Because they’ve gone, must I go too? Take leave
of my senses one by one, or two by two?

The good witch Sycorax has bright blue eyes
and now she’s on her own she may fantasize. (Sycorax 1-2)

The first thing that is striking about this section is the line in all capital letters declaring that Prospero lied when he said that the island was “uninhabited.” In the next line Sycorax claims ownership of the island, following the logic of private property. Yet the text in the parenthesis undermines this and shows Sycorax’s understanding of the limitations of the (masculinist, colonialist) discourse of private property. In the subsequent lines, the speaker critiques both Ariel and Caliban. Ariel is depicted as a narcissist (“checking his reflection” in a “pool”), and Caliban as a “mimic man,” to borrow an expression coined by the scholar Homi Bhabha, or indeed as a failed nationalist, if one were to use Frantz Fanon’s analysis.

The contrast between this Caliban who “went with the gods who were only men” and Namjoshi’s Caliban in ‘Snapshots of Caliban’ is worth highlighting. Each section of “Snapshots of Caliban” is told from the perspective of Caliban, Miranda, or Prospero. Namjoshi’s Caliban in Section V of “Snapshots of Caliban” says “Some of the ‘gods’ want to take me with them. But I no longer believe they are gods. I don’t trust them” (Because of India 90). This is critique enough, but Namjoshi’s poem goes a step further with the last couplet in italics, which is not from Sycorax’s perspective. The question that we are left with as readers is which of Sycorax’s critiques and musings are fantastical? Whose voice is the italicised text? No single meaning is evident. As Vijayasree puts it, “when Namjoshi narrates her tale she does not serve the meaning on a platter to her readers; in fact she does not even believe there is a single authoritarian meaning that a writer can dictate. Instead, she leaves it to her readers to draw their own inferences and arrive at their own decoding of the texts. Namjoshi texts reveal themselves in slow degrees, gradually and gratifyingly. A reader does not work on them; they work on the reader” (Vijayasree 14 -15).

 

A Lesbian Feminist Vision of the Cow

The cow, as Ruth Vanita points out, “is one of the best-known symbols of India in the West” (Vanita 290). In contemporary India it is a symbol of Hindu India. Remarking on how growing up in a Hindu household impacted her, Namjoshi notes in Because of India, “[o]ne of the unexpected effects of being in Gill’s [Gillian Hanscombe’s] company was that I became aware of just how much I had been influenced by the Hinduism around me while I was growing up, and of the rather subtle ways in which a Hindu background rather than a Christian one shapes one’s thinking” (Because of India 112). This reflection highlights both the impact of Hinduism on Namjoshi, and also that often one understands oneself better in conversation with an “other”—or someone from a different background. In another interview, Namjoshi mentions that in “Christianity you make a difference between animals and human beings – and gods. In Hinduism you don’t have to animate animals, they already have an anima. That changes one’s attitude subtly. I find I’m sometimes talking about cats as if they were people” (Kenyon 110).

The Conversations of Cow (1985) brings together Namjoshi’s attitude towards animals through her use of the most sacred of animals in the Hindu pantheon, the cow. Vijayasree points out that “The Conversations of Cow does not belong to any known genre; it is a novella, a feminist utopian tale, a piece of speculative fiction, a lesbian bildungsroman, all in one. This erasure of boundaries between literary genres is important in the feminist enterprise of negotiating in-between spaces and creating new spaces” (Vijayasree 102). The use of the cow Bhadravati as a central figure, and as the human narrator Suniti’s partner in her journey, allows for the “new spaces” to be created and negotiated. Bhadravati is no ordinary cow—she is a “Brahmini cow,” “an immigrant cow,” and indeed a lesbian cow (The Conversations of Cow 13-14). While it is easy, based on name alone, to take the character of Suniti as a stand-in for the author, Bhadravati could also be seen as a stand-in.

Here it is worth turning to Ruth Vanita’s analysis of the cow as a gendered symbol. At first glance, she points out, the cow seems “to be definitely gendered, pointing towards woman as Goddess on the one hand and woman as exploited subordinate on the other, as well as to the image of Mother India as an undernourished, overmilked breeder” (Vanita 291). She goes on to suggest that:

However, in ancient as well as in modern texts, the cow is as often a site for ungendering as it is for gendering. In Sanskrit, the noun go means both ‘bull’ and ‘cow’; in its generic form, the word, like the English ‘cattle’, is not gendered. In the Vedas, powerful natural forces, like rivers, are figured as cows as well as Goddesses. They are not merely nurturing but also potentially dangerous, and must be propitiated. (Vanita 291)

Namjoshi’s work engages with this more complicated understanding of the figure of the cow. In fact, Bhadravati is in many ways a “stray cow” who has a “liminal status” in modern India “as simultaneously sacred and a nuisance, symbolic of motherhood yet a non-reproductive consumer,” and this, for Vanita, “enables it to cross boundaries, literally and metaphorically” (Vanita 304). This liminality is hinted at in one of the early conversations between Bhadravati and Suniti:

‘What do you live on?’ I blurt it out.

‘Welfare,’ she replies. ‘Not as good as the pickings in India. There one is supposed to be worshipped as a god, not that one is – but the climate is warmer. (The Conversations of Cow 14 -17)

The phrasing “supposed to be worshipped as a god” points to the fact that there may be a disjuncture between the ideal and the reality when it comes to life as a stray cow—one dependent on “Welfare.”

Vanita points out that “Namjoshi’s Cow is a symbol for crossing boundaries of gender, race, nationality and sexuality, because the beast trope already functions in similar ways in both Western and Indian literary traditions” (Vanita 306). Bhadravati is Baddy, B, Bud as the novel progresses, shifting genders, race, nationality, and sexuality. Indeed, at one point, when Bhadravati is Bud (seemingly a white cis man), Bud and Suniti have a conversation about men and women because Suniti believes that men are from Mars. Eventually Suniti asks, “Are you trying to tell me Men from Mars are really women?” (The Conversations of Cow 107). And Bud replies, “Yes. You’ve got it at last” (107). At first read, one might consider this a satirical take down of the self-help book Men are from Mars, Women are from Venus, but this popular book was published in 1992, almost a decade after The Conversations of Cow. Either way, it seems like Bhadravati, through the many forms she takes, is trying to make Suniti see that some of her long-held assumptions need to be unpacked.

The novel’s ending provides important insight into Namjoshi’s oeuvre as a whole. Cow and Suniti tell each other that they like the other. Cow asks, “‘What? Even when I’m B or Baddy or Bud?’ ‘Even then,’ I reply. But I look at Cow and add quickly, ‘Even then I find you wholly engaging.’ We smile at each other” (The Conversations of Cow 125). Written in 1985, Namjoshi’s depiction of a happy ending for lesbian characters, where different positionalities and manifestations are welcome and not a cause for anxiety, places the author, in many ways, ahead of her time. Perhaps this is why, as Dasgupta points out, “most accounts of Indian writing in English or anthologies of critical essays on this writing either omit Namjoshi or mention her perfunctorily” (Dasgupta 101).

Published Works by Suniti Namjoshi

Fiction and Poetry

Poems. Writers Workshop, 1967.

More Poems. Writers Workshop, 1971.

Cyclone In Pakistan. Writers Workshop, 1971.

The Jackass and the Lady. Writers Workshop, 1980.

Feminist Fables. Sheba Feminist Publishers, 1981.

The Authentic Lie. Fiddlehead Poetry Books, 1982.

From the Bedside Book of Nightmares. Fiddlehead Poetry Books & Goose Lane Editions, 1984.

The Conversations of Cow. The Women’s Press, 1985.

Flesh and Paper (with Gillian Hanscombe). Jezebel Tapes and Books, 1986; Ragweed Press, 1986.

The Blue Donkey Fables. The Women’s Press, 1988.

The Mothers of Maya Diip. The Women’s Press, 1989.

Because of India: Selected Poems and Fables. Onlywomen Press, 1989.

Feminist Fables, Spinifex Press, 1993

Saint Suniti and the Dragon. Spinifex, 1993; Virago, 1994.

Building Babel. Spinifex, 1996.

Goja: An Autobiographical Myth. Spinifex, 2000.

Sycorax: New Fables and Poems. Penguin Books, 2006.

The Fabulous Feminist: A Suniti Namjoshi Reader. Zubaan, 2012; Spinifex, 2012.

Suki. Penguin India, 2012; Spinifex, 2013.

Foxy Aesop aka Aesop the Fox. Zubaan, 2018; Spinifex, 2018.

Children’s Literature

Aditi and the One-Eyed Monkey. Sheba Feminist Publishers, 1986.

Aditi and the Thames Dragon. Tulika Publishers, 2002.

Aditi and the Marine Sage. Tulika Publishers, 2004.

Aditi and the Techno Sage. Tulika Publishers, 2005.

Aditi and Her Friends Take on the Vesuvian Giant. Tulika Publishers, 2007.

Aditi and Her Friends Meet Grendel. Tulika Publishers, 2007.

Aditi and Her Friends Help the Budapest Changeling. Tulika Publishers, 2007.

Aditi and Her Friends In Search of Shemeek. Tulika Publishers, 2008.

Gardy in the City of Lions. Tulika Publishers, 2009.

Siril and The Spaceflower. Tulika Publishers, 2009.

Monkeyji and the Word Eater. Tulika Publishers, 2009.

Beautiful and the Cyberspace Runaway. Tulika Publishers, 2009.

Blue and Other Stories. (art work Nilima Sheikh). Tulika Publishers, 2012; North Melbourne: Spinifex, 2012.

Little i. Tulika Publishers, 2014.

The Boy and Dragon Stories (pictures Krishna Bala Shenoi). Tulika Publishers, 2015.

Works Cited

Dasgupta, Anannya. “‘Do I Remove My Skin?’ Interrogating Identity in Suniti Namjoshi’s Fables.” Queering India: Same-Sex Love and Eroticism in Indian Culture and Society, edited by Ruth Vanita. Routledge, 2002, pp. 100-110.

Guarracino, Serena. “Identity, Language and Power in Sunitin Namjoshi.” Muses India: Essays on English-Language Writers from Mahomet to Rushdie, edited by Chetan Deshmane. Jefferson, McFarland, 2013, pp. 134-145.

Kenyon, Olga. The Writer’s Imagination: Interviews with Major International Women Novelists. University of Bradford, 1992.

Mann, Harveen S. “Suniti Namjoshi: Diasporic, Lesbian Feminism and the Textual Politics of Transnationality.” The Journal of the Midwest Modern Language Association, vol. 30, no. 1/2,1997, pp. 97-113.

Namjoshi, Suniti. Because of India. Only Women Press, 1989.

—. Sycorax: New Fables and Poems. Penguin, 2006.

—. The Conversations of Cow. The Women’s Press, 1985.

Singh, Jyotsna G. Shakespeare and Postcolonial Theory. The Arden Shakespeare, 2020.

Vanita, Ruth. “‘I’m an Excellent Animal’ Cows at Play in the Writings of Bahinabai, Rukun Advani, Suniti Namjoshi and Others.” Gandhi’s Tiger and Sita’s Smile: Essays on Gender, Sexuality and Culture. Yoda Press, 2005, 290-310.

Vijayasree, C. Suniti Namjoshi: The Artful Transgressor. Rawat Publication, 2001.

Poems by Suniti Namjoshi
CardinalSycorax: Prologue
The author would like to thank Jhani Randhawa for their editorial support.
Copyedited by Atul V. Nair.

Chitra Banerjee Divakaruni | Nalini Iyer

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Cite this Essay

MLA:
Iyer, Nalini. “Chitra Banerjee Divakaruni.” Indian Writing In English Online, 08 May 2023, https://indianwritinginenglish.uohyd.ac.in/chitra-banerjee-divakaruni-nalini-iyer/ .

Chicago:
Iyer, Nalini. “Chitra Banerjee Divakaruni.” Indian Writing In English Online. May 08, 2023. https://indianwritinginenglish.uohyd.ac.in/chitra-banerjee-divakaruni-nalini-iyer/ .

Chitra Banerjee Divakaruni is a prolific and a popular South Asian American writer. Her works combine storytelling and social justice with a focus on immigrant rights, gender, citizenship, and belonging. In a blog post on her author website, Divakaruni writes: “Sometimes I’m asked if I would have become a writer if I hadn’t moved to the United States. I don’t know the answer to that question. I do know, though, that I couldn’t have written the same kinds of stories, hybrids born out of the melding of the Indian and American cultures”(https://www.chitradivakaruni.com/blog/2013/7/7/america).  Divakaruni who is a poet, novelist, activist, and academic was born in Kolkata on July 29, 1956. After receiving a B.A. from the University of Calcutta, she moved to Wright State University in the United States for an M.A. She  completed her Ph.D. from the University of California at Berkeley in 1985. She has taught at several American colleges and universities and is currently the McDavid Professor of Creative Writing at the University of Houston in Texas. As an activist, she is the founder of Maitri, an organization in San Francisco that supports women who are victims of domestic violence. She also serves on the board of Daya, a Houston based organization that does similar work. Her literary works have won several awards including the American Book Award  (1996), the PEN Josephine Miles award (1996), and she has been shortlisted for the Orange Prize (1997).

Divakaruni’s work is shaped by her experiences as an immigrant woman, and many of her works focus on how women navigate the trials and tribulations of the immigrant experience. She also depicts strong women characters who overcome adversity and establish life pathways for themselves. In recent years, she has turned to reworking Indian mythology and history from the perspective of women and thus her The Palace of Illusions (2008) retells the Mahabharata from Draupadi’s perspective, and the The Forest of Enchantment (2019) presents the Ramayana from Sita’s viewpoint. Her most recent novel, The Last Queen (2021), tells the story of Jindan, the youngest wife of Maharajah Ranjit Singh and her struggle against the British Empire while serving as a regent who protected her young son’s rights.

 

The Immigrant Experience:

Like many middle-class and upper-caste Indians who emigrated to the United States, Chitra Divakaruni also arrived there as a graduate student. In 1965, the United States passed the Immigration and Nationality Act which provided opportunities for educated Indians to study and work in the United States. While such  changes in the law benefited many in the technical and scientific fields, there were people who also pursued studies in the Humanities like Divakaruni. Her first publication was a poetry collection Black Candle (1991) that  garnered praise for its South Asian metaphors and images. For example, in “The Garba” set during the Navaratri, “Light glances/off the smooth wood floor of the gym/festooned with mango leaves/flown in from Florida” (43), the poet simultaneously invokes the nostalgia and displacement of the diasporic subject. Some of the poems were inspired by the art and film of others. For example, “The Rat Trap” was inspired by Adoor Gopalakrishnan’s film Elipathayam  and “Two Women outside a Circus, Pushkar” was influenced by one of Raghubir Singh’s photographs. Her second collection Leaving Yuba City (1997) is notable for its final sequence of poems in which Divakaruni tells the stories of the early Sikh immigrants to the Imperial Valley in California. Her poignant poems speak to the loneliness of the immigrant men who were either single or had left their wives behind. She writes of the bewilderment of the women who arrive years later to find their husbands changed, of young men whose interracial marriages to Mexican women transformed their everyday lives, and of the daughters of the early immigrants who struggled to escape strict homes. These poems frame lyrical narratives in the context of the lesser-known history of South Asians in the Pacific Coast.

 

Divakaruni’s first work of fiction was Arranged Marriage (1995), a collection of eleven women-centric stories that focused on urgent topics such as domestic violence, the  isolation of immigrants, and the stigma of divorce. Divakaruni’s stories in this collection are notable for raising awareness about violence within immigrant families that are exacerbated by the challenges of migration. In the 1990s her fiction addressed topics that were relatively underexplored in South Asian American writing. Divakaruni’s  first important novel The Mistress of Spices (1997) marks her shift from the realist mode of her debut short stories to a melding of realism and fable. Her protagonist Tilo has magical healing powers and arrives in a spice store in San Francisco, where her customers share their stories of struggle and she offers them spices that give them solace. She falls in love with a Native American man, Raven, and in committing to him breaks the code for spice mistresses. Her choice between conformity to the mistress’s code and autonomy mirrors the struggles of her clients. The narrative is thus a celebration of Tilo’s  autonomy. Scholars like Inderpal Grewal have critiqued the novel’s dismissal of the violence of the spice trade and its embrace of an American vision of multicultural solidarity by “producing ethnic identity through exotic difference” (Grewal 76). However, as I have argued elsewhere, the spice store setting shows Divakaruni’s understanding of that violent history and traces its continuity in current times as an exotic grocery store in the Bay area where, ironically, the customers unaware of the history of the spice trade are nevertheless experiencing racism, alienation, and prejudice that trace their roots to that colonial trade (Singh et al., 7).

Divakaruni’s depiction of the immigrant experience takes a significant turn after 9/11 when she begins documenting the struggles of South Asian immigrants in the United States in the new racialized regime with intensified Islamophobia. In an essay she published in the LA Times, Divakaruni writes about how 9/11 led to her displaying an American flag in her home because she cherished American values of liberty, equality, and justice and notes also that immigrants like her are always viewed with a suspicious lens (https://www.latimes.com/archives/la-xpm-2001-oct-21-op-59757-story.html). In Queen of Dreams (2004), she once again works with magical realism as she had done in The Mistress of Spices. Rakhi, her protagonist, the child of Indian immigrants, is distanced from her mother who had the ability to interpret and experience the dreams of others. In exploring her mother’s dream journals after her death, Rakhi learns much about her family history. When 9/11 shatters Americans’ sense of security and invulnerability, Islamophobia dramatically increased in the United States. There were many violent attacks on South Asian immigrants, including Sikhs, who were misidentified as the Taliban. This rise in violence shattered many immigrants’ ‘American Dream.’ Rakhi’s child who has inherited her grandmother’s ability to interpret and experience dreams struggles with her nightmares about burning buildings. Rakhi and her friend Belle witness violence against their Sikh friend who is mistaken for a Muslim. Their café and restaurant, like Tilo’s spice store, become a space for community and solidarity for immigrants of color.

In Oleander Girl (2013), Divakaruni once again explores the impact of 9/11 on Indian immigrants when her protagonist, Korobi, visits from Calcutta to search for her father whom she had believed dead. Using her family’s wealth and business connections, Korobi embarks on a search for her father. Her quest takes her from New York to California. Korobi, who has been raised in a wealthy Calcutta family, and is about to marry into a wealthier one, has a limited understanding of race and racism. She has experienced prejudice in India for her dark skin, and in her travels in the United States, she learns of the hardships and racism that Indians have experienced in post 9/11 America. She witnesses domestic violence and marital breakdown due to racism in the lives of the Mitras, the couple who host her in New York. The Mitras manage an art gallery for the Boses, Korobi’s prospective in-laws, and the attacks on their business threatens their economic stability and also that of the Bose family. She undertakes a road trip to meet her father and is surprised to learn that he is Black. Her assumption as a child was that her American father was white, and her discovery that she is half-Black leads to a recalibration of her identity and her experiences with colorism. In meeting her father, she learns about her parents’ romance but little about her father’s experience of race as a Black man. She understands that the rejection of her father by her grandparents and the subsequent secrets about her birth reflect an intertwining of anti-Black racism with both caste and colorism in India. The novel undermines the popular idea of Indian Americans as upwardly mobile and wealthy professionals. Through the story of the Mitras and of Vic, a working-class Indian American man, Divakaruni challenges the model minority myth. However, when Korobi returns to India to marry Rajat Bose, she seems to set aside her African-American heritage and fully embrace her Indian identity. Thus, while Divakaruni draws a connection between the experiences of racism in the US and the anti-Black views in India, the novel’s ending emphasizes Korobi’s re-assimilation into her wealth and privilege.

Reworking Myth and History:

In recent years, Divakaruni has shifted the focus of her fiction to Indian myth and history. As a feminist writer, she seeks to recover lost or marginalized women’s voices through fictionally reimagining well-known narratives from women’s perspective. Her The Palace of Illusions (2008) rewrites the Hindu epic, The Mahabharata, from the perspective of Paanchali (Draupadi). She presents Paanchali’s story of birth, her marriage to five brothers, her deep involvement in her husbands’ quest for their lost kingdom, and her relationship with Lord Krishna. In The Forest of Enchantments (2019), Divakaruni retells The Ramayana from Sita’s perspective. Framed as a feminist retelling, the novel not only makes Sita the protagonist, it also highlights and reworks perspectives on other female characters including Surpanakha (Ravana’s sister), Mandodari (Ravana’s wife), and Sunaina (Janaka’s wife). Divakaruni’s retelling of the Hindu epic participates in the long tradition of retellings, what Paula Richman has called “many Ramayanas,”(9) through which the epic is kept alive. Divakaruni portrays Sita as a warrior princess who is skilled in archery and also as a healer and an eco-feminist. Drawing not just from Valmiki’s Ramayana but also from Krittibas, Kamban, Adbhuta Ramayana, and Jaina traditions, Divakaruni remains focused on not just the greatness of Rama but the role of the women in his life. Kaikeyi is portrayed with compassion and Lakshmana’s wife Sumitra as one devastated by his decision to exile himself with his brother. In her retelling, Divakaruni also suggests the possibility that Sita is the child of Mandodari and Ravana who is abandoned by her parents because her birth foretells the doom of her father and thus hints at an incestuous relationship between Ravana and Sita. Divakaruni imagines the everyday life of Sita as Queen when she returns to Ayodhya and needs to resurrect a household that has been neglected for many years. She also explores palace intrigues in great detail and adds in the human dimension to a narrative that is often read as divine.

In The Last Queen (2022), Divakaruni returns once more to a Queen whose story, like Sita’s, has been overshadowed by that of her warrior husband. Jindan, the youngest wife of Maharaja Ranjit Singh, is the center of this narrative and Divakaruni writes of the King’s courtship of the young daughter of one of his employees, a keeper of horses. The teenage Jindan falls in love with a much older king and the marriage occurs by proxy when the girl marries Ranjit Singh’s sword because he is absent, being at a war. The courtship of Ranjit Singh and Jindan is portrayed as in any contemporary romance novel, and as with The Forest of Enchantments, much narrative energy focuses on palace intrigues—power plays amongst queens and concubines, poisonings, household factions and so on. Once Ranjit Singh dies, Jindan finds herself and her baby son in danger. But with clever political maneuverings she becomes the regent when her child, Dalip, is installed as Ranjit Singh’s heir. When the Sikh Empire falls to the British, Dalip is sent to England as the ward of Queen Victoria and his mother is imprisoned. She tricks her way out of prison and makes a harrowing journey to Nepal where she is at first welcomed and offered refuge, and later despised for her politics. The narrative traces her reunification with her anglicized adult son, and her eventual death. The novel is both a critique of how women’s roles in politics are overlooked by historians and an examination of the British destruction of the mighty Sikh Empire. Although The Forest of Enchantments rewrites an epic and The Last Queen draws on a historical figure, the narratives depict the women protagonists similarly—beautiful, clever, able to manipulate palace intrigues, and sexually empowered. Such similarities in character development render these women almost anachronistically contemporary and framed by second-wave American feminism as developed by critics such as Sandra Gilbert, Susan Gubar, Elaine Showalter, among others. Second-wave feminists focused on recovering the works of overlooked women writers (Showalter) and in understanding Victorian women writers and their female characters (Gilbert and Gubar). Thus, Divakaruni’s feminist depictions run the risk of what Chandra Mohanty identified in “Under Western Eyes: Feminist Scholarship and Colonialist Discourse”—the production of a monolithic “third world woman” (51, Indian woman in Divakaruni’s case), and producing feminist knowledge about India using Western strategies and analytic categories. This alignment with second-wave feminism makes Divakaruni popular with North American readers.[1]  By foregrounding women of color in her fiction and for telling stories of their struggles against a stereotypical Indian patriarchy, Divakaruni’s writing aligns with the North American publishing market’s drive for diversity in their lists.

Divakaruni’s most recent novel is Independence (India, 2022; United States, 2023) in which she tells the story of three sisters—Deepa, Priya, and Jamini—and their quest for autonomy set against the backdrop of Indian independence and Partition. Using brief epigraphs to sections of the book, she gestures toward the larger political issues such as the Radcliffe line or Gandhi’s satyagraha movement. She also examines the Partition’s impact on the lives of the three sisters and their mother. The family loses the father in the violence following Direct Action Day in 1946 in Calcutta and experiences growing poverty in their small rural community. As they strive to make ends meet, they are helped by an avuncular local wealthy man, and each sister forges her own path. Deepa elopes with a Muslim doctor and moves to Dhaka; Jamini struggles with her disability and her unrequited love for Amit, her sister Priya’s fiancé; and Priya is forced to choose between her aspirations to study medicine in Philadelphia and her impending marriage to Amit. Sisterly relationships, women’s struggle for autonomy, the challenges of living in a patriarchal society are the themes that are echoed from Divakaruni’s prior fiction. The sections outlining Priya’s life as a medical student in the 1940s in America is reminiscent of Divakaruni’s ongoing interest in pre-1965 Indian immigrant history demonstrated by her Yuba city poems. As a historical novel, Independence is noteworthy for its focus on the Bengal partition and the political challenges in East Pakistan that eventually led to the formation of Bangladesh.

 

The first anthology of criticism, Critical Perspectives on Chitra Banerjee Divakaruni: Feminism and Diaspora, was published in 2022.  It contains 12 critical interviews on a range of Divakaruni’s work and 3 reprinted interviews as well as a substantive introduction by the editors. In the scholarly works published on Divakaruni, certain novels predominate, and these include The Mistress of Spices, Queen of Dreams, and The Palace of Illusions. Much of the scholarship examines themes of diaspora, displacement, feminism, and women’s empowerment. Divakaruni herself  maintains an author website www.chitradivakaruni.com that is a useful resource for her readers.

Chitra Divakaruni is an important voice in South Asian diasporic fiction. She explores a range of forms and techniques in her writing- from poetry and essays to realist short fiction, magic realism, and historical fiction. As a feminist writer, she has (along with Bharati Mukherjee and Jhumpa Lahiri) foregrounded the experiences of Indian middle-class women with immigration, alienation, family struggles, and racism. Her focus on women overcoming hardships and finding autonomy offers a hopeful approach to the challenges of diasporic living. Divakaruni has contributed significantly to the mainstreaming of South Asian American voices in the realm of ethnic literature in the United States.

Primary Texts

Divakaruni, Chitra Banerjee. Black Candle. Calyx Books, 1991.

—. Arranged Marriage. Anchor, 1995.

—. Leaving Yuba City. Deckle Edge, 1997.

—. The Mistress of Spices. Anchor, 1997.

—. Queen of Dreams. Doubleday, 2004.

—. The Palace of Illusions. Anchor, 2009.

—. Oleander Girl. Simon and Schuster, 2013.

—. The Forest of Enchantments. Harper Collins, 2019.

—. The Last Queen. Harper Collins, 2021.

—. Independence. William Morrow, 2023.Selected Bibliography on Divakaruni

Buley-Meissner, Mary Louise. “Chitra Banerjee Divakaruni: A Bibliographic Review of Resources for Teachers.” Asian American Literature: Discourses & Pedagogies, vol. 1, no.7, 2010, pp. 142-153.

Erney, Hans-Georg. “Draupadi Returns with a Vengeance.” Journal of Postcolonial Writing, vol. 55, no.4, 2019, pp. 486-497.

Grewal, Inderpal. Transnational America: Feminisms, Diaspora, Neoliberalisms. Duke UP, 2005.

Iyer, Nalini. “Embattled Canons: The Place of Diasporic Writing in Indian English Literatures.” Other Tongues: Rethinking the Language Debates in India, edited by Nalini Iyer and Bonnie Sue Zare, Rodopi/Brill, 2009, pp. 3-21.

Rasiah, Dharini. “Chitra Banerjee Divakaruni.” Words Matter: Conversations with Asian American Writers, edited by King-Kok Cheung, U of Hawaii P, 2000, pp.140-153.

Shankar, Lavina Dhingra. “Not too Spicy: Exotic Mistresses of Cultural Translation in the Fiction of Chitra Divakaruni and Jhumpa Lahiri.” Other Tongues: Rethinking the Language Debates in India, edited by Nalini Iyer and Bonnie Sue Zare, Rodopi/Brill, 2009, pp. 23-52.

Singh, Amritjit, Robin E. Field, Samina Najmi, editors. Critical Perspectives on Chitra Banerjee Divakaruni: Feminism and Diaspora. Lexington Books, 2022.

Works Cited

Gilbert, Sandra, and Susan Gubar. The Madwoman in the Attic: The Woman Writer and the Nineteenth Century Imagination. Yale UP, 1980.

Mohanty, Chandra Talpade. “Under Western Eyes: Feminist Scholarship and Colonial Discourses.” Boundary 2 , vol.12, no. 3, 1984, pp. 333-358. Richman, Paula. Many Ramayanas: The Diversity of a Narrative Tradition in South Asia. U of California P, 1991.

Showalter, Elaine. Sexual Anarchy: Gender and Culture at the Fin de Siècle. Viking, 1990.

 

[1] Actual data on point-of-sale numbers for books is only accessible to publishers. Mistress of Spices was reviewed in the New York Times and was on their bestseller list. Her latest, Independence, received starred reviews from Publishers Weekly and Booklist. Her One Amazing Thing made it to citywide reading programs in nine American cities and was on all “campus-reads” programs on twenty-three college campuses.

Edited by: Sreelakshmy M
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