Abstract This essay examines Dildora Damisch Muzafari's memoir Sunshine Girl: My Journey from the Soviet Orient to the Western World (2020) as a transnational narrative of migration, gender, and ambivalent freedom. It situates Muzafari's intimate storytelling within postcolonial and feminist theoretical frameworks, tracing her negotiation of Soviet colonial hierarchies, socialist exclusions, and US racial capitalism. Focusing on her depictions of gender roles, linguistic tensions, and embodied self-fashioning, the essay argues that Muzafari performs belonging through mimicry, willfulness, and selective proximity to dominant norms, while remaining marked as Other. Her memoir disrupts linear narratives of migration and emancipation, revealing how minoritized women craft agency through contradiction and ambivalence. In doing so, Sunshine Girl broadens our understanding of post-Soviet immigrant literature as a site where memory and identity are continually reimagined across shifting political and cultural landscapes.
Saltanat Shoshanova (Sun,) studied this question.