Indian diasporic fiction reflects the complex emotional and cultural landscapes of migration, highlighting the dual themes of belonging and displacement. This paper critically examines how Indian diasporic authors such as Salman Rushdie, Jhumpa Lahiri, Bharati Mukherjee, V.S. Naipaul, and Chitra Banerjee Divakaruni portray characters navigating life between their homeland and adopted countries. The literature explores issues of identity, alienation, nostalgia, and cultural negotiation, revealing the emotional tensions that arise from leaving one’s roots behind while striving to adapt to new socio-cultural environments. First-generation immigrants often confront cultural dislocation, homesickness, and a sense of loss, while second-generation characters frequently experience hybrid identities, cultural confusion, and the search for belonging. Through their works, these writers create a narrative space where fragmented identities and transnational experiences are explored with emotional depth and cultural insight. Drawing upon postcolonial and diaspora theories, this review traces the evolution of Indian diasporic literature—from early exilic themes to more fluid, globalized expressions of identity. The paper argues that Indian diasporic fiction functions as a literary bridge between cultures and histories, expressing both the trauma of displacement and the resilience of adaptation. Ultimately, it reveals how the quest for home continues to shape the Indian diasporic imagination.
Atul Kumar Kanojia (Thu,) studied this question.
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