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International Journal of Research in English
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Vol. 7, Issue 2, Part B (2025)

Writing the self, writing the nation: negotiating race, gender, and belonging in Michelle Obama’s becoming and Mary Antin’s the Promised Land

Author(s):

Irfana Parveen and Saburunnisa A

Abstract:

This article looks at the connection between personal stories and national identity by comparing Michelle Obama's Becoming and Mary Antin's The Promised Land. Both books are personal acts of self-fashioning that are closely connected to larger social and political conversations about race, gender, immigration, and belonging in the United States. Antin, a Jewish immigrant from Russia, tries to figure out who she is in the context of the American Dream in the early 20th century. Obama, on the other hand, has to cope with the challenges of being a Black woman in modern America, where she has to deal with systematic racism, gender expectations, and public scrutiny. The study looks at how both writers build their identities in connection to popular national stories, both supporting and questioning the idea that America is a place of opportunity and equality. The article uses ideas about identity, intersectionality, and narrative belonging to say that Becoming and The Promised Land are not just stories of personal accomplishment; they are also political texts that change the definition of what it means to be truly American. Antin and Obama both write about their lives in a way that makes their marginalised identities part of the fabric of the nation. They do this by telling powerful stories that change the way we think about American citizenship, memory, and inclusion.

Pages: 100-102  |  627 Views  124 Downloads


International Journal of Research in English
How to cite this article:
Irfana Parveen and Saburunnisa A. Writing the self, writing the nation: negotiating race, gender, and belonging in Michelle Obama’s becoming and Mary Antin’s the Promised Land. Int. J. Res. Engl. 2025;7(2):100-102. DOI: 10.33545/26648717.2025.v7.i2b.440
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