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Abstract

The literary landscape of the 21st century is richly textured with narratives of migration, cultural displacement, and hybrid identities. Jhumpa Lahiri, a prominent voice in diasporic literature, intricately weaves the complexities of East-West encounters in her novels. This paper explores how Lahiri portrays the cultural, emotional, and psychological negotiations that immigrant characters—particularly of Indian origin—undertake as they navigate life in the United States. Through close textual analysis of her major works—The Namesake, The Lowland, and Whereabouts—the study reveals how Lahiri represents themes of alienation, assimilation, identity conflict, intergenerational tensions, and the longing for belonging. The paper argues that the East-West encounter in Lahiri’s novels is not merely a cultural binary but a nuanced dialogue that encapsulates personal and collective struggles of diasporic existence. By portraying characters who live between cultures, Lahiri transcends stereotypical East-versus-West dichotomies and instead offers a mosaic of human experiences shaped by migration and memory.

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How to Cite
Binay Shanker Roy. (2024). Cultural Crossroads: East-West Encounters in the Novels of Jhumpa Lahiri. International Journal for Social Studies, 10(12), 100-104. Retrieved from https://journals.eduindex.org/index.php/ijss/article/view/20633