30 pages 1 hour read

Jhumpa Lahiri

Sexy

Fiction | Short Story | Adult | Published in 1998

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Background

Authorial Context: Jhumpa Lahiri’s Writing and Perspective

Nilanjana Sudeshna “Jhumpa” Lahiri is a UK-born Indian American novelist, poet, and essayist. Born in 1967 to first-generation immigrant Bengali parents, she moved to Rhode Island with her family as a child. The family maintained close links with their Bengali culture and travelled often for extended visits to relatives in India. Lahiri grew up speaking Bengali at home. She has stated: “When I was growing up… I felt neither Indian nor American. Like many immigrant offspring I felt intense pressure to be two things” (“Jhumpa Lahiri Biography.” Chicago Public Library, 31 Oct. 2006). In her work, Lahiri often sets up a “culture clash” of identities, behaviors, and locations and explores the experience of those who feel inherently divided between “two things.” Her body of work engages with facets of identity, assimilation, and tensions, especially centered around Indian, American, and British characters and settings. “Sexy” is no exception: it presents the complex relationships between a group of American and Indian American characters negotiating life in Boston, especially the ways in which culturally and racially diverse identities and relationships can be enriching, intoxicating, educative, and challenging. In following the experience of a white American protagonist’s interaction with members of the Indian diaspora community, “Sexy” is unusual in the Interpreter of Maladies collection and Lahiri’s work more generally, which most often concentrates on a “culture clash” as experienced by characters with Indian heritage.