1) Meena Alexander was an Indian-American writer known for her poetry, novels, and essays exploring themes of migration, memory, and cultural identity.
2) Her poem "Her Garden" depicts a "third space" between the poet and her deceased grandmother, using imagery of a garden to connect across generations and cultures.
3) Alexander's writings often depicted characters navigating between cultures and negotiating questions of identity, as she herself did through experiences living in India, Sudan, Britain, and the United States.
1) Meena Alexander was an Indian-American writer known for her poetry, novels, and essays exploring themes of migration, memory, and cultural identity.
2) Her poem "Her Garden" depicts a "third space" between the poet and her deceased grandmother, using imagery of a garden to connect across generations and cultures.
3) Alexander's writings often depicted characters navigating between cultures and negotiating questions of identity, as she herself did through experiences living in India, Sudan, Britain, and the United States.
Original Title
ANALYSIS AND EXPLORING THIRD SPACE IN MEENA ALEXANDER
1) Meena Alexander was an Indian-American writer known for her poetry, novels, and essays exploring themes of migration, memory, and cultural identity.
2) Her poem "Her Garden" depicts a "third space" between the poet and her deceased grandmother, using imagery of a garden to connect across generations and cultures.
3) Alexander's writings often depicted characters navigating between cultures and negotiating questions of identity, as she herself did through experiences living in India, Sudan, Britain, and the United States.
1) Meena Alexander was an Indian-American writer known for her poetry, novels, and essays exploring themes of migration, memory, and cultural identity.
2) Her poem "Her Garden" depicts a "third space" between the poet and her deceased grandmother, using imagery of a garden to connect across generations and cultures.
3) Alexander's writings often depicted characters navigating between cultures and negotiating questions of identity, as she herself did through experiences living in India, Sudan, Britain, and the United States.
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ANALYSING AND EXPLORING THIRD SPACE IN MEENA
ALEXANDER’S ‘HER GARDEN’
Meena Alexander was a New York-based Indian writer and scholar of
international standing. Her contribution to Indian literature consists of multiple collections of poetry, essays and works of fiction. Alexander was born in Allahabad, India on 17 Feb.1951, and grew up in Kerala and Sudan. She completed her Ph.D. from Nottingham University. Her teaching career, of over 30 years, consists of stints at University of Hyderabad and Columbia University. Some of Alexander’s notable works include the two novels Nampally Road and Manhattan Music, her poetry collections, Illiterate Heart, Raw Silk, Quickly Changing River and Birthplace with Buried Stones. She is credited with editing a volume of essays and poems on the themes of migration and memory called The Shock of Arrival: Reflections on Postcolonial Experience and collection of poems called Indian Love Poems. She published her autobiographical memoir, Fault Lines in 1993 which was revised in 2003. Her writings stay unique due to its lyrical style and exploration of social issues of migration from a personal perspective. She died in New York, United States on 21 Nov.2018. Third space or “the third space of enunciation” was a concept put forward by Homi K Bhabha in his work The Location of Culture. He associates the idea with his earlier discussed concept of hybridity in the same work and to denote interdependence and mutual construction of the subjectivities of the colonizer and colonized. The third space can be defined as a space in between the first space of parent culture and the second space of forced or acquired culture as a result of colonisation. This third space thus acquired is hybrid in the sense that it is a blend of the culture and practices in the first and second space. This can also take place in individuals who face identity crisis as a result of exposure to a number of different cultures like Meena Alexander who was born in Allahabad, raised in Allahabad, Khartoum and Kerala, educated in Sudan and Britain, married and settled in New York City. The third space can also result in mimicry and ambivalence as Bhabha discusses in the work Of Mimicry and Man whereby he connects the idea of mimicry to the Lacanian vision of the same idea as camouflage resulting in colonial ambivalence describing ambivalent relationship between the colonizer and colonized. This act of mimicking the superior culture might result in a view that the parent culture is inferior to the culture of the colonizer. Ambivalence, originally a concept deriving from psychoanalysis, disrupts the clear-cut authority of colonial domination because it disturbs the simple relationship between the colonizer and the colonized. In the poem Her Garden, Meena Alexander builds such a third space, but not to depict contradicting cultures but to show the space in between her and her deceased grandmother. The garden or “her garden” as the title signifies is symbolic of the past nostalgic memories that the grandmother had in the garden. She tries to connect these memories to her current situation or life by stating that “we are one.” It can be symbolic of the lonely experience her grandmother underwent in the past. The third space can also be suggestive of Alexander’s diasporic culture and her urge to stick to the parent culture or the Indianness of which she and her grandmother, both are a part of. Even though, Alexander’s grandmother died even before she was born, the poet is able to connect with the departed soul through memories and experiences. She urges to encounter the same experiences her grandmother underwent in the garden. The poem is a free verse without a rhyme scheme or pattern. The poem is actually an explosion of the poet’s thoughts and feelings without following a particular idea. The images related to nature symbolise a connecting path that brings the poet and grandmother together. They can also be considered as objects that witnessed the life of grandmother and the poet, bringing Alexander more close to these elements of the garden. The poet’s feeling of dislocation is carried away by the mountains, cicada, mulberry tree and other elements that form a part of nature or the garden. The crackling of the mountains, bristling of cicada are all auditory images that arouse the presence of grandmother in the poet. The cicada is also a Greek symbol of immortality and resurrection. The barks of the mulberry tree are similar to the wrinkled hands of the old lady. The first two stanzas deal with the elements of nature which form a part of the garden. The third stanza surprises us, as the poet hints the death of her grandmother which she presents casually as though a conversation with the reader. The garden and nature had witnessed the death of her grandmother and she loves to think that the lonesome lady died looking at the sky symbolising her desire to send the departed soul to heaven. The sun above might have been an onlooker of the death. She compares grandmother’s death to the setting of the sun which is calm and peaceful. The soul departed without creating any chaos. Her soul must have been like a young goat leaping over the cracks symbolising a happy journey to heaven. The last stanza reveals that the poet and her granny had never seen each other but their experiences, memory and surroundings bring them together. The poet feels that she and her grandmother are one like a sky abandoned by sun and star symbolising their loneliness. The memory that the poet has about her grandmother is similar to the “rare fragrance of dry mulberry” during monsoon. The poem is an imaginary one in the sense that the poet tries to describe the life of her grandmother whom she has not even seen in real life. The forced images in the poem create a vague idea and try to produce a third space in the mind of the poet and the reader. The poet through the poem might find it successful in identifying herself with the dead grandmother and thus reach a state of solace. Meena Alexander was always successful in creating different versions of third space due to her experiences and exposure to multiple cultures. She was a diasporic writer confused of her ‘self’ and individuality. The character Mira she presents in her novel Nampally Road faces such an uncertainty as she was a young woman educated in England, working in a college in Nampally Road, Hyderabad. She was confused whether to identify herself as a western or Indian woman. Meena Alexander in the poem, The House of Thousand Doors tries to string together her fragmented dreams, visions and imaginations about her native place in an attempt to patch up her torn postcolonial identity. The image of black female migrant as ‘other’ when compared to the narrator as seen in Fault Lines analyzes how Alexander herself feels and understands the racial disparity and otherness in the society. She has also dealt with writings like Manhattan Music where an Indian woman like the protagonist Sandhya Rosenblum faces conflict based on identity and race amidst the vertigo of whites in the land forcing her to create a third space. Alexander’s exposure to diverse ethnic and religious communities and her multicultural experiences have greatly influenced and shaped her work by creating various ‘third spaces’ that differ from one another. The recurrent themes of heritage and cultural displacement mark her literary productions. In an interview, Meena Alexander had stated herself to be both an Indian and American suggesting her acceptance of both the culture and identity. She thus, was a writer who created a third space in her own life accepting parts of culture she was exposed to.