A Cultural Study of Diaspora and its Role in the Formation of Identity in The Lord of the Rings
Hadiseh Alishiri
1
(
Department of English Language and Literature, Karaj Branch, Islamic Azad University, Karaj, Iran
)
Hossein Moradi
2
(
Department of English Language and Literature, Karaj Branch, Islamic Azad University, Karaj, Iran
)
Keywords: Culture, Fantasy world, Lord of the Rings and The Hobbit, Identity and Diaspora.,
Abstract :
In this paper, the researcher intends to show the Fantasy world, like the real world, suffers from racial issues and cultural diversities as well. Moreover, the main claim of this article is to depict that the tensions and battles that exist in the selected novels are the result of diaspora, dislocation, and cultural diversities as the subjects attempt to adjust or fail to adapt themselves. In this research, Hall’s theory is used as the main framework. In the selected works Lord of the Rings and The Hobbit, the idea of dislocation is the dominant notion among the characters of the story. The characters might not belong to a specific region while they live there and they would not be accepted by the other character. Consequently, they become confused about their own identity and regard themselves as hybrid subjects. This means that the notion of hybrid identity is dominant among several characters in the series. Consequently, the characters have different features that might be contradictory. ecocriticism has other disciplines such as environmental justice and deep ecology that remain open to trace them in the selected novels. In addition, applying other approaches, such as psychoanalysis, to the novels could also be beneficial, since when searching for the purpose of this study, many interesting issues on the novels and discussions can be read.
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