Breaking the Chains: Identity and Cultural Rebellion in Aravind Adiga's The White Tiger
https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.15545075
Keywords:
Identity, Culture, Socio-economic divide, Caste system, Class hierarchy, Rebellion, Self-reinventionAbstract
This paper examines the complex link between identity and culture in Aravind Adiga's The White Tiger, a striking novel reflecting India's deep socio-economic divides. The central character, Balram Halwai, emerges as a representative figure who defies the restrictive cultural standards and rigid class structures that shape his early life. Growing up in the impoverished rural area known as the "Darkness," Balram forges a new sense of self through rebellion, deceit, and reinvention. The novel critiques the fixed identities imposed by caste, social status, and location. Instead, it highlights personal agency in the reconstruction of identity. Drawing on postcolonial theory and cultural studies, this paper analyses how Adiga reveals the false promise of equality in a rapidly globalizing India while exposing the darker aspects of personal ambition. Balram's evolution demonstrates that identity is not a fixed inheritance but a dynamic response to cultural, political, and economic forces. The study concludes that The White Tiger acts as a sharp critique of Indian society, where age-old traditions clash with modern dreams, and where identity becomes a means of both endurance and resistance in a divided world.
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