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Essay #2:
Write an essay about The Namesake. Develop a thesis that answers the following question:
PLEASE DO NOT USE OUTSIDE RESEARCH FOR THIS PAPER. I WANT YOUR IDEAS SUPPORTED WITH QUOTES FROM THE NOVEL.
Please look at one of the main characters in the novel through the first lens (Ethnicity/Race/Culture) from the handout “Lenses for Reading Literature” (handed out in class 6/15 and posted on our Moodle site). With this lens in mind, create a thesis that addresses the following: How does this character struggle?
LENSES FOR READING LITERATURE:
1. Ethnicity/Race/Culture: This lens allows us to look at issues/conflicts/questions that arise in a text that relate to the ethnicities, races, and cultures of the characters in the text. It is particularly important to consider these issues when characters in the text come from different ethnic/racial/cultural backgrounds and the text reveals how the characters’ diverse backgrounds might cause confusion, conflict, or meaningful interactions. It is also important when stereotypes or prejudice results because of these differences. An example of this is Rita Dove’s “Parsley,” where the Dominican General Trujillo decided to kill many Haitian workers because they did not speak Spanish “properly.” Another example could be “Two Kinds,” where the Chinese mother and her Chinese‐American daughter come into conflict.
When these differences in culture represent one group who is oppressed and another group that is in power (or colonizes/controls this oppressed group), this lens can be called Post‐Colonial Literary Criticism (Schilb 1603). Also, for more information on this, visit http://owl.english.purdue.edu/owl/resource/722/10/.
2. Gender:
This
lens
examines
the
conventional
or
traditional
roles
that
men
and
women
may
play
in
a
text
and
also
how
men
and
women
might
reject
or
protest
or
try
to
change
these
roles.
An
example
of
reading
a
text
through
a
gender
lens
may
be
looking
at
the
relationship
between
the
narrator
of
“The
Yellow
Wallpaper”
and
her
husband,
John,
or
to
think
about
how
the
gender
of
the
aunt
in
“No
Name
Woman”
contributed
to
her
punishment
and
suicide
and
asking
whether
a
man
who
committed
the
same
act
would
be
treated
differently.
In
literary
criticism,
this
lens
is
often
called
Feminist
Criticism.
Feminist
critics
“hope
to
uncover
and
challenge
essentialist
attitudes
that
hold
it
is
normal
for
women
to
be
kept
in
domestic,
secondary,
and
subservient
roles,
and
they
affirm
the
value
of
a
woman’s
experiences
and
perspectives
in
understanding
the
world”
(Schilb
1601).
For
more
information
on
this,
visit
http://owl.english.purdue.edu/owl/resource/722/11/.

This
lens
can
also
be
used
to
talk
about
sexuality
and
sexual
orientation.
This
approach
is
called
Gender
Studies
and
Queer
Theory
and
raises
questions
about
how
characters
of
different
genders
or
sexualities
are
portrayed/described
in
a
text.
For
more
information,
please
see
http://owl.english.purdue.edu/owl/resource/722/12/.
3. History:
This
lens
considers
how
the
time
period
and
place
is
described
in
a
text
and
how
a
writer’s
life
may
affect
the
way
she
writes
about
a
particular
time
and
place.
Looking
at
a
text
through
this
lens
means
asking
what
a
particular
text
says
about
a
particular
time
and
place.
It
also
means
thinking
carefully
about
why
a
particular
writer
might
depict
a
moment
in
history
in
a
particular
way
and
how
a
reader
living
in
a
particular
time
period
or
place
might
understand
a
text
in
a
particular
way.
An
example
of
this
is
Kurt
Vonnegut’s
“Harrison
Bergeron.”
This
was
written
in
1961,
a
time
in
which
many
people
in
America
were
thinking
about
issues
surrounding
communism
and
capitalism.
If
we
read
this
text
through
a
historical
lens,
we
might
think
about
what
Vonnegut
might
be
trying
to
say
about
communism,
capitalism,
and
equality.
We
might
also
think
about
what
would
be
different
in
the
story
if
Vonnegut
had
written
this
is
2010
vs.
1961.
To
what
extent
are
Vonnegut’s
social
concerns
relevant
today?
This
approach
is
often
called
New
Historicism
(1601).
Also,
see
the
following
website
for
more
information:
http://owl.english.purdue.edu/owl/resource/722/09/.
4. Psychology: This lens focuses on the internal struggles/issues/concerns of a character in a text. If we read a text through this lens, we may focus on the feelings of guilt, fear, or inner conflicts of a particular character, trying to understand what the character’s emotional state may be and what the character’s unconscious desires may be. An example of this is Sylvia Plath’s “Daddy.” Plath describes her speaker as suffering from something that Sigmund Freud calls the Electra complex, in which a daughter idolizes her father as a sort of God. Critics have also pointed out that the speaker has very ambiguous feelings about her father as she mourns his death, desires to be close to him, and also hates and fears him (269).
This approach is similar to Psychoanalytic Criticism and the theories of Sigmund Freud (1601). For more information, also see http://owl.english.purdue.edu/owl/resource/722/04/.
5. Social Class: This lens often overlaps with lenses that examine culture, race, ethnicity, and history. Overall, this lens looks at the differences between social classes of characters. It looks at a text to see if there are any important differences in the economic or social status among characters. For example, when using this lens, you might ask yourself, is there one character who has a lot more money that the other characters? A lot less money than other characters? What are the different types of jobs that different characters hold? An example of using this lens might be reading through Jamaica Kinkaid’s “Girl” and thinking about the types of work that the characters in this text do. Are these jobs associated with prestigious social status or wealth? Why or why not? Why is this important in understanding the text?
This is a starting point. You need to develop a specific, argument thesis statement and support your points with the text. For example I might use the following as my thesis:
In the novel The Namesake by Jhumpa Lahiri, Gogol’s struggle for cultural identity is evident in his romantic relationships with Maxine and Moushumi.
TIPS:
– Have a specific working thesis before you begin writing and utilize pre-writing techniques.
– Write as if the reader of your paper already knows the plot of the story/stories you are writing about. Avoid plot summaries and focus on your ideas/analysis.
– Underline the title of the novel.
– Use quotations/passages from the novel to prove your points. Be sure and list the page number in parenthesis after your quote. If you are quoting text that is more than three lines, use MLA block style.
– Use present tense when describing story events.