Namesake
Novel
Namesake
The Namesake portrays both the
immigrant experience in America, and the complexity of family loyalties
that underlies all human experience. Ashoke and Ashima Ganguli, after an
arranged marriage in India, emigrate to America where Ashoke achieves
his dream of an engineering degree and a tenured position in a New
England college. Their son Gogol, named for the Russian writer, rejects
both his unique name and his Bengali heritage.
In a scene central to the novel’s theme, Ashoke gives his son a volume
of Nikolai Gogol’s short stories for his fourteenth birthday, hoping to
explain the book’s significance in his own life. Gogol, a thoroughly
Americanized teenager, is indifferent, preoccupied with his favorite
Beatles recording. Such quietly revealing moments give the narrative its
emotional power. The loneliness of lives lived in exile is most
poignantly revealed in the late night family telephone calls from India,
always an announcement of illness or death.
Gogol earns his degree in architecture, but happiness in love eludes
him. An intense love affair with Maxine draws him into a wealthy
American family, revealing the extreme contrasts between American and
Indian family values. Gogol’s marriage to Moushumi, who shares his
Indian heritage, ends in divorce.
Jhumpa Lahiri’s conclusion achieves a fine balance. Ashima, now a widow,
sells the family home and will divide her time between America and
Calcutta. Gogol, at thirty-two, discovers in his father’s gift of
Gogol’s short stories a temporary reconciliation with his name and the
heritage he has rejected.
Critics praise Lahiri’s luminous, graceful style and her keenly observed
details of daily life, particularly the mythic significance of food and
ethnic customs. The Namesake, her first novel, fulfills the promise of her collection of short stories, The Interpreter of Maladies (1999), that won the Pulitzer Prize in 2000.
Comments
Post a Comment