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>FORTIFYING OR FORGING DIVIDES: FOOD CULTURE THEORY AND IDENTITY CONSTRUCTION IN T.C. BOYLE’S THE TORTILLA CURTAIN AND JHUMPA LAHIRI’S UNACCUSTOMED EARTH
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FORTIFYING OR FORGING DIVIDES: FOOD CULTURE THEORY AND IDENTITY CONSTRUCTION IN T.C. BOYLE’S THE TORTILLA CURTAIN AND JHUMPA LAHIRI’S UNACCUSTOMED EARTH
Using the premise set forth by Roland Barthes that “food signifies,” this thesis analyzes immigrant fiction and how diasporized peoples construct and perform their identities along class, gender, and ethnic lines. The first chapter unpacks and presents food culture theory as a meaningful tool to analyze works of literature. The subsequent two chapters apply food culture theory and its role in identity production through a close reading of T.C. Boyle’s novel The Tortilla Curtain (1995) and Jhumpa Lahiri’s short story collection Unaccustomed Earth (2013). In both, food behavior of the migrants exemplifies the ongoing vacillation between the desire for assimilation and rejection of the host culture. Moreover, the various foodways presented in the works show how food consumption can signify a divide or exemplify a struggle to reconcile public and private identities.
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