dc.description.abstract | Third Space thinking is emerging as an important area of enquiry in the socio-cultural
studies to compensate the inherent deficiencies in binary thinking, bringing about a paradigm
shift in our perceptions of gender, race, ethnicity, nationality, and identity. The commonly
accepted notions about binary thinking which dichotomizes identity into simple oppositions
are challenged, opening up an in-between space or a liminal space. The Third Space refers to
this interstitial space between the binaries. This is a liberatory space which holds and opens
up numerous possibilities. There is an exponential growth of people who remain in the in-
between space due to the ongoing migration, globalization and the resultant hybridity,
cultural inter-mixings, and the formation of diaspora. The sexual minorities who are stamped
as deviants or aberrations due to their difference in sexual orientation and appearance are also
positioned in the in-between spaces. These people find it difficult to assert their identity, be it
gender, race, language or nationality.
I have focussed the present research work upon the inscriptions of the Third Space in
select contemporary narratives. The narratives include Amitav Ghosh’s Ibis trilogy
comprising Sea of Poppies, River of Smoke, and Flood of Fire, Arundhati Roy’s The Ministry
of Utmost Happiness, Rituparno Ghosh’s film, Chitrangada: The Crowning Wish, A.
Revathi’s autobiography, The Truth about Me: A Hijra Life Story and Anzaldua’s
autohistorio-teoria, Borderlands / La Frontera: The New Mestiza.
The thesis is divided into four chapters in addition to “Introduction” and
“Conclusion”. Chapter I “The Expressions of the Third Space” brings together the theoretical
postulations of different critical thinkers and theoreticians like Homi K. Bhabha, Edward W.
Soja, Henri Lefebvre, Gloria E. Anzaldua, and bell hooks relating to the Third Space. Chapter
II, “Migration, Hybridity, and Identity in Ibis Trilogy” deals with migration, hybridity,
identity, and the expressions of the Third Space in Amitav Ghosh’s Ibis Trilogy. Chapter III,
“Borders and Borderlanders in Borderlands / La Frontera: The New Mestiza” studies the
impact of borders upon the life of the borderlanders with a special focus upon Anzaldua’s
Borderlands. Chapter IV “Gender Fluidity in Select Narratives” analyses Chitrangada: The
Crowning Wish, a film by Rituparno Ghosh; The Ministry of Utmost Happiness written by
Roy; and The Truth about Me: A Hijra Life Story, an autobiography of Revathi. It deals with
the marginalized sexual minorities with specific reference to homosexuals and transgenders,
and shows how they try to find a space for themselves in society by asserting their self and
identity. “Conclusion” is a summation of the observations made in all the preceding chapters.
It underscores the importance of Third Space thinking. | en_US |