Living in Limbo: the buddha of suburbia and the final passage

Karim and Leila live between two cultures that are considered to be in two polar
opposites, the cultures of the white and the black. Because of their parentage, they
belong to both cultures and yet they do not belong to either one. The white British
regards Karim as "the other", but he also regards an India born Indian to be "the
other". Whereas Leila, is also regarded as "the other" in the Caribbean village where
she grew up and yet, when she has immigrated to London, she regards the other
Caribbean immigrant as "the other". This means that both of them have shifted their
position from "the other" to "the self" in their attempt to find a place where they
belong. The feeling of not belonged, puts them in a state of limbo; a state that is
loaded with anxieties, questions and conflicts as they are unable to find an anchor
that they can grip on.

Jenny Mochtar Djundjung Unknown Universitas Kristen Petra English eDIMENSI Journal Unknown Jurnal Sastra Inggris Volume 3, Number 1, June 2001: 1 - 7; Jenny Mochtar Djundjung (86-012) KURESHI, HANIF, 1954-...THE BUDDHA AT SUBURBIA-STUDY AND TEACHING; ENGLISH FICTION--20TH CENTURY--STUDY AND TEACHING

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