The prayer room :a novel, and, The salt of another earth : a critical study of food and culinary practice in Indian-American narratives of the immigrant experience
PhD ThesisThis dissertation examines, creatively and critically, the role of gastronomy in Indian-
American literature. The creative element consists of a novel entitled The Prayer Room.
The critical component is titled The Salt of Another Earth: The Role of Food and
Culinary Practice in the Indian-American Narrative of the Immigrant Experience.
The Prayer Room tells the story of a married couple, George and Viji Armitage,
both immigrants to Sacramento, California, individually tracing each protagonist’s
immigrant experience. George, a native of Nottingham, finds himself in an anti-climactic
version of the America he once idolised, and grows increasingly lackadaisical in his
professional and personal lives. Viji, a Tamil Hindu, struggles to gain control over her
domestic realm, and makes a personal refuge of her prayer room. Here, she displays
pictures and statues of Hindu deities, and portraits of deceased loved ones. She
compartmentalises her past successfully enough to manage her present, until the arrival
of her English father-in-law, Stan Armitage. Stan’s presence challenges the integrity both
of George and Viji’s marriage, and of their decision to migrate.
The critical portion of this thesis analyses, alongside The Prayer Room, two
immigrant-centred novels by Indian authors: Bharati Mukherjee’s Jasmine and Anita
Desai’s Fasting, Feasting. Each novel features an Indian immigrant protagonist who
leaves a native collective for life in the United States and, in the process, experiences a
rebirth of the individualism which their collectives have silenced. This reawakening is
reflected by each author’s treatment of culinary preparation and consumption.
The Prayer Room’s culinary practice provides distinct commentary on the
immigrant experience, but has been influenced by its literary predecessors. The aim of
this dissertation is to explore how the commonality and divergence of culinary incidence
in the three chosen texts reflect upon the nature of the Indian immigrant experience