THE ACTOR OF SUBURBIA: IDENTITY AND SELF-TRANSFORMATION IN THE BUDDHA OF SUBURBIA
Abstract
Abstract: This essay studies the significance of acting and performing in relation to selftransformation
and the search for an identity in Hanif Kureishi’s The Buddha of Suburbia. It
uses Judith Butler’s discussions on moral responsibility and gender performances, in order to
investigate how the characters negotiate their identities and draws on Edward Said’s
discussion on Orientalism to establish how the novel uses stereotypes as a way of
undermining stereotyping and Orientalist learning. It also draws on Erving Goffman’s
discussion on stigmatised identities, in order to better understand how the characters cope
with discriminatory behaviour, being treated as second-class citizens, due to either their social
or ethnic background. Arguing that the novel creates a link between the theme of acting and
the theme of identity, this paper takes a closer look at the performative aspects of the
narration and how the concept of authenticity becomes a problematic influence on
performances of identity. Furthermore, this essay examines how the novel portrays the impact
of Orientalist learning on social behaviour in a post imperial society, the prejudices and
discrimination against Eastern identities and how it has helped produce a stigma against
immigrant culture and becomes a cause for identity crises, for several of the characters.
Degree
Student essay
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Date
2016-02-03Author
Hallhagen, Maria
Keywords
postcolonialism
performativity
authenticity
Orientalism
Series/Report no.
SPL kandidatuppsats i engelska
SPL 2015-110
Language
eng