Time Of Loss And Dismay: Dislocation, Disconnection And Distortion Of Family Values In Tyler’s Dinner At The Homesick Restaurant

Dr. R. Rajasekar

Abstract


The paper intends to investigate the concepts of sex, gender and motherhood at a time when the Dick-Jane principle of an idealized society began to fade. Dinner at the Homesick Restaurant questions the place of a father at the dinner table. He no longer stands to support the family or look into the emotional and the financial needs of a family. As a result, the mother has to take the place of a father. The novel explores the changing roles with the changing times and it effects on the present day American family. To Tyler, the family would begin to become a unit of nothingness in case its members do not come together to put together the broken pieces of disintegration.


Keywords


Dinner- Sex- Gender- World Wars.

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References


Tyler, Anne. Dinner at the Homesick Restaurant. New York. Knorpf Publishing House. 2008.

Welty, E. (1978).“Place in Fiction,” in The Eye of the Story: Selected Essays and Reviews, New York: Random House.

Croft, R. (1998).W. Anne Tyler Companion. Westport: Greenwood Press

Conley, John. "A Clutch of Fifteen." The Southern Review, NS 3 (Summer, 1967).


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