Preview

The Namesake

Satisfactory Essays
Open Document
Open Document
457 Words
Grammar
Grammar
Plagiarism
Plagiarism
Writing
Writing
Score
Score
The Namesake
Why is naming so important?
• For Gogol, his name is a source of embarrassment and for his father it is more of salvation
• His name is the start of his family traditions, but he eventually does not follow any of the traditions

Does your name identify who you are?
• A person’s name is an identifier and may end up being more than just a name
• A name may connect with something else (like naming after a grandparent to represent them) – Gogol’s name represents his father’s close to death experience
• Pg 28: it is suggested to name the baby after the parents’ names, but in the Indian heritage you are not supposed to name the baby after the parents because to each person a name has its own meaning
• Dislocation: Gogol feels at home in America, but his parents don’t because they are Indian and they live by Indian culture
• The name Nikhil represents him better than the name Gogol because – Gogol more represent his father
• In Bengali a persons name can serve the predestination of the person’s life

The Overcoat:
• To be a copier you have to be literate
• Person copies documents by hand - you are basically a copy machine

Is there another name Gogol could have been called in the book?
• The letter from the grandmother could have shown up later

Pg. 286
Randomness of life: Are things determined or at random?
• Survival guilt: why you were spared and others were killed – Gogol’s father has this feeling after the train accident – why is he the only one in his cart that is spared?

• Hashimi – never feels at home in America, so she goes back to India when her husband dies
Does Gogol feel at home anywhere?
• He was never really comfortable anywhere because he is part of two different worlds
• He feels like an outsider
• He did not want to be connected with his father’s past – he did not go to MIT (like his father wanted), he went to Yale
How does opening the book about his name for the first time affect Gogol?
• Makes him miss his father and makes

You May Also Find These Documents Helpful

  • Good Essays

    Bonnie Wach’s article, “What’s in a Name” explores the impact of how names can affect a person. Wach clarifies that there is nothing unique when a person has the same name as another thus many parents decide to be uncommon by naming their child something peculiar. As some may know, many parents try individualizing a child by separating those…

    • 258 Words
    • 2 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    A name in its simplest form addresses a person, place, thing, or idea, yet with every name comes a flood of associated names and ideas. For Dana and her mother the use of choice words with the least amount of negative connotation seems to be of the utmost importance. She states “It matters what you call things” (5), but the name by which one identify with, or that one uses to address an activity or idea, matters for the most part only to the said person. Those viewing one's life, as the reader does with Dana, form their own ideas and interpretations of that person and his or her activities. Therefore a name matters because it expresses how one feels about their…

    • 669 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    Jhumpa Lahiri Culture

    • 653 Words
    • 3 Pages

    Those that live in America and those that live in India have different lifestyles and traditions, but when you have to balance both, it’s difficult to figure out who you truly are. Gogol grows up throughout the book with a Hindu-Indian family while living in America. He confronts the challenge of assimilating while trying to pursue two cultures. As he gets older, he then tries to find his identity by changing his name from Gogol to Nikhil and starts different relationships. But Gogol then realized that what has held him and his family together has been the Indian culture, which has influenced him from the moment he was born and named. In the novel The Namesake by Jhumpa Lahiri, Gogol was influenced greatly by the Indian culture because it motivated…

    • 653 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    With this I connect to the change that happened for the aristocrats in the 16th century. Names became as important as who one was birthed by. Suddenly one could marry into a powerful and mighty family name. With this I’m sure that the lower class questioned this system, as however not everyone could marry rich.…

    • 573 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    Despite the fact that one’s name is selected by somebody else and inevitably predetermines their fate , while they are living their life they can shape their name to try and conform their own values while also leaving it as a legacy once they are gone. Throughout Song of Solomon, the names of the characters help to disclose an immense amount about their personalities, as well, as how their monetary status creates their motivation, effects their decisions, and helps to form their legacy. Throughout the novel, many of the character’s names are chosen by someone else but still empower them to make the name, their own which helps to liberate them to indulge in a more prosperous life, rather than a life strictly focused on gaining a…

    • 839 Words
    • 4 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    Both sisters, who were born in India, moved to the United States to receive a college education. While in America, Mira kept her Indian culture by marrying an Indian man and staying a legal immigrant to the US to stay true to her culture. Bharati decided to become an American citizen and even marry a Canadian-American man. The decision to choose which culture to adapt to impacted the girls lives in two different ways. Bharati had to deal with what her family would think because she was marrying a white man, but she was able to transform her identity and experience another culture. “America spoke to me—I married it—I embraced the demotion from expatriate aristocrat to immigrant nobody, surrendering those thousands of years of ‘pure culture,’ the saris, the delightfully accented English. She retained them all” (Mukherjee, 71). Bharati let everything she grew up learning, be pushed to the side so she could adapt and try to be part of the American culture and she was fine with that. However, her sister, Mira, symbolized the people who stayed “rooted in one job, one city, one house, one ancestral culture, one cuisine, for the entirety of their productive years” (Mukherjee, 71), meaning that she stayed true to her Indian roots and did not experience and adapt to the American culture, even though she was living in the United States. Even though they both experienced the hardships of being immigrants, the two sister’s views on life are much different because one had adopted another country's culture, while the other one had stayed true to her original…

    • 923 Words
    • 4 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Better Essays

    Gogol misperceives how others perceive him, generated from his lack of understanding of his place in the world due to his unusual name. During a class trip to a cemetery in his earlier years, Gogol cannot find his name on any of the headstones and is confronted with the fact that his name is unique. Contrasted to the generic American names of his friends, “Colin and Jason and Marc”, Gogol perceives his name only highlights his cultural differences to his peers and provides a barrier to belonging. The simile used, “at times his name, an entity shapeless and weightless, manages nevertheless to distress him physically, like the scratchy tag of a shirt he has been forced to wear”, highlights Gogol’s internal discomfort with his name. The scratchy tag is only worn, or perceived, by Gogol and hence he has created his own barrier to belonging. At a college party, Gogol introduces him self using…

    • 1575 Words
    • 7 Pages
    Better Essays
  • Good Essays

    Throughout the novel, The Namesake by Jhumpa Lahiri, the character Gogol changes in many different ways. One of the most apparent changes was in his "Indian ness". By "Indian ness" I mean the amount of his parents Bengali ways and traditions that he retained. While growing up he did everything in his power while growing up to stray away from his parents' Bengali ways. Gogol spent most of his life trying to differ from his parents, however in the end he ends up obeying their wishes as to who he marries. As he was growing up Gogol felt only embarrassment and shame because of his background and because his parents did things differently than his other American friends' parents. For example, unlike his American friends, while in college Gogol had to return home every other weekend to accompany his parents to their Bengali friends' parties. Throughout his life he tried to shed his parent's un-American lifestyle but in the end he succumbed to his past and ancestry.…

    • 2414 Words
    • 10 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    crucible

    • 909 Words
    • 4 Pages

    For this writing assignment, you will examine the history and meaning behind your name. Your paper should discuss the background behind your name, and it should also discuss what you hope your “name” will mean after you die. In other words, what do you hope people (family, friends, co-workers, the world, etc.) will say when someone mentions your name?…

    • 909 Words
    • 4 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    People wont always appreciate your sacrifices. People won't look at them with positivity and at times you might get knocked down. Sacrifices also come with difficulty. With hard times and people might take a while to understand. Some might not even understand at all. Especially when it’s the ones you love the most. Your family, your friends, the ones who you love dearly. And it’s gets hard. When people don't appreciate you. And the sacrifices you make. Its even harder to push through when the sacrifices you make, are not only for yourself, but for the ones you love. Gogol was always some what embarrassed of his name, of his background and his custom that he inherited from his parents. He wanted to be a typical American like all his friends…

    • 522 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Better Essays

    Power 2

    • 1380 Words
    • 6 Pages

    One’s power and position in a society can give them the “right” or ability to name or un-name a person. Someone can gain this right by his or her status socially, financially, and even racially. If it’s their own child, of course, they have every right in the world to name him or her. But in some cultures, as is evident in “No Name Woman”, they have the right to take away someone’s name if they have disgraced their family and/or community. A name is very significant because it gives a person a sense of who they are, an identity. In “No Name Woman”, Kingston’s aunt had no identity except for the story her mother told her and in “Mary” Marguerite’s new boss, Mrs. Cullinan changed her name to Mary which then, in a way, removed Marguerite’s original identity and gave her a new one, one she didn’t want.…

    • 1380 Words
    • 6 Pages
    Better Essays
  • Good Essays

    The Namesake

    • 747 Words
    • 3 Pages

    In the book The Namesake, there is a boy named Gogol Ganguli. Gogol’s name is very different compared to everyone else and he has struggles with having a different/unique name. When I first started reading the book in class, Gogol’s name really stuck out to me. The reason being because of how unique it was. I feel bad about how Gogol had struggles with his name because I felt that everyone should love their name, no matter what anyone else thinks about it.…

    • 747 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Powerful Essays

    Diasporic experiences can be extremely challenging and testing at the least, and Akhil Sharma’s life, represented in his novel Family Life, is no exception. The semi-autobiographical novel illustrates the hardships faced by an Indian family after moving to the United States and soon after, almost losing one of their sons to an accident that changed all of their lives. The novel, however, focuses mostly on Ajay, and how his life slowly transforms as we read the story from his perspective. Being a member of the Indian diaspora myself, the empathetic connection between Ajay and myself allowed me to understand and relate to the ever changing relationship between him and his parents, and how that shaped Ajay as a person in his future, for better…

    • 1131 Words
    • 5 Pages
    Powerful Essays
  • Satisfactory Essays

    The name Steven deals with a massive amount of Greek history. as well as originating from Greece. I think my name fits me well because I have a great fondness for the Greek culture as well as its fascinating history.…

    • 287 Words
    • 2 Pages
    Satisfactory Essays
  • Good Essays

    “At times, as the laughter at Gerald and Lydia’s table swells, and another bottle of wine is opened, and Gogol raises his glass to be filled yet again, he is conscious of the fact that his immersion in Maxine’s family is a betrayal of his own” (Lahiri, 141).…

    • 590 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Good Essays