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Identity

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Submitted By sumerismail13
Words 1439
Pages 6
Sumer Ismail
Professor Benjamin Delloiacono
English 105
19 February 2015 Identity in Colors

An individual’s personality represents their identity and also symbolizes the new changes in their identities. The story “Clothes” from Chitra Banerjee Divakaruni’s short story provides a connection between the color of clothes of a person and their identity. The main characters changing clothes at the different stages of her life symbolizes her changing characteristics, which ultimately forms a new identity for her. Moreover, the theme of identity in colored clothing in “Clothes” by Chitra Banerjee Divakaruni’s connects to the various colors on the gay pride flag. In “Clothes”, Mita wears different colors of saris which symbolize the beginning of a new life, adding to how the rainbow colors of the flag have become widely recognized as a symbol of LGBT pride and identity. In the article “Meet Gilbert Baker, the Man Who Invented the Gay Pride Rainbow Flag” by Samantha Grossman, the author states how Gilbert Baker created a rainbow flag that became a new symbol representing diversity and acceptance. This paper will compare how colors have become a symbol of pride and identity as they are represented in Grossmans article within the framework of “Clothes”. Through this careful examination the evidence will reveal how the use of color represents identification and hinder the author’s arguments. While on the surface Divakaruni’s story is about cultural transition due to an arranged marriage, what the author is really exploring is how the colors she wore on her saris represented her identity in India and then in America.

The author utilizes color symbolism to express the emotional changes that Sumita is going through and how she uses colors to keep her grounded with her Indian beliefs during her transition from girl to bride-to-be to an Indian-American to widow. The different colors of saris have different meanings for the protagonist in the short story. When preparing to become a bride she he describes her wet and yellow sari as a sunflower after rain. The sari which her father brings for her to wear on the bride-viewing day is pale pink. Divakaruni claims that “It was the most expensive sari I had ever seen, and surely the most beautiful. Its body was a pale pink, like the dawn sky over the women’s lake. The color of transition. Embroidered all over it were tiny stars made out of real gold zari thread” (Divakaruni 280). Here we can see that the author is implying the symbolism in Mita’s pink sari and also what the color represents. She imagines herself in a new country, far away from her native region. Mita’s flight to America is colored with a blue and red sari. Blue symbolizes the color of possibilities and red as a color of luck for a married woman. The sari symbolizes her transition from her homeland to a new land and also reflects her hopes for a happy life there. As her life progresses in America as does she, she has dreams of one day getting an education and becoming a teacher. When she is in her bedroom in, she tries on t-shirts and jeans, her American clothes brought by her husband, “I’m wearing a pair of jeans now, marveling at the curves of my hips and thighs, which have always been hidden under the flowing lines of my saris. I love the color, the same pale blue as the nayantara flowers that grow in my parents’ garden. The solid comforting weight. The jeans come with a closefitting T-shirt which outlines my breasts” (Divakaruni 283). Her American clothes already mark the changes that is about to come in her life. The small, apartment itself makes her struggle with two different identities of being an Indian woman and a western lady. She lives in two different worlds; her past in India and the other is her present, America. The different colors of the Gay Pride Flag have different meanings, similarly to the various colors in Mita’s saris. Closeted gay people historically used bright colors to signal their homosexuality to each other. The flag gave them an identity. In the past, gays were closeted and didn’t have the courage of coming out as gay or lesbian. In 1974, Harvey Milk made himself known by becoming the first openly gay person to hold a high public office in a major American city. So artist Gilbert Baker took the opportunity to create a flag: Inspired, Baker began working on a flag. He dyed the fabrics himself and, with the help of volunteers, stitched together eight strips of brilliant color into a huge banner that spoke volumes: hot pink stood for sexuality, red for life, orange for healing, yellow for the sun, green for nature, turquoise blue for art, indigo for harmony and violet for spirit. He remembers vividly the moment when his new flag was first raised. (1)
The six-striped Rainbow Flag was soon proudly flown outside many San Francisco homes and businesses. Thus, wherever a symbol of pride and hope, the rainbow appeared. In 1988, John Stout of West Hollywood, CA sued his landlords for the right to display a Rainbow Flag on the balcony of his apartment. He won, as have many others since who have defended their right to display the Rainbow Flag. Recently, Gilbert Baker said, “It’s beautiful, all of the colors, even the colors you can’t see. That really fit us as a people because we are all of the colors. Our sexuality is all of the colors. We are all the genders, races and ages” (Grossman 1). The Rainbow Flag is just like any other flag, it belongs to the people, and it identifies then and who they are. Baker’s flag has become a consistent recognition in this day in age and is served as a worldwide symbol of the LGBTQ movement. People everywhere are stepping out more than ever and the Rainbow Flag is there to say the colors of this vibrant cloth recognize who these people are. Over the last years the flag has gained popularity as a symbol. The open display of the flag in different forms shows, that the gay community has enormously gained in self-confidence. They don’t hide themselves any longer, but can openly show their gayness. In addition to being the symbol of pride, the rainbow is a symbol of hope. Tremendous progress has been made in the fight for equal rights. Step by step, lesbians, gays, bisexuals and transgendered people are obtaining recognition as equal members, in big cities and in towns and villages across the world. The rainbow affirms the hope for an even better future. In comparison to the colors of the Rainbow Flag, Mita’s saris also indicate new hope through the color she wears. As she enters this new world she sees new possibilities and she emerges as a different woman ready to start a new chapter in her life. Similarly, lesbians, gays, bisexuals and trans genders are also seeing hope and opportunity to be themselves in this generation, and the colors of the flag help to recognize who they are. Those unfamiliar with this school of thought may be interested to know that it boils down to the way colors are similarly represented in the rainbow flag and also in Mita’s sari’s. As Mita’s transitions the clothes at different stages of her life symbolize her changing identity and at the end it symbolizes her embracing the western culture with empowerment and her freedom of choices. Similarly, the colors of the Rainbow flag show the representation of the various colors on the flag, symbolizing the identities emerging. Gilbert’s theory that LGBTQ ‘s are seeking hope to be themselves and fit in is extremely useful because it sheds light on the different problem of accepting the lesbians, gays, bisexuals and trans genders in the future. Moreover, concluding that color has been seen as identification for lesbians, gays, bisexuals and trans genders and also stages of a girls changing characteristics revealing the process of formation.
Works Cited
Divakaruni, Chitra. “Clothes.” Literature to Go. Ed. Michael Meyer. Boston: Bedford/St. Martin’s,
2011. 280-286. Print

Dreher, Marlaina, and Zulema Ibarra. "The Sari: Meanings Behind the Cloth." Facts. Www.factsfashion.com, 28 June 2011. Web. 29 Jan. 2015.

Grossman, Samantha. "Meet Gilbert Baker, the Man Who Invented the Gay Pride Rainbow Flag | TIME.com." NewsFeed Meet Gilbert Baker the Man Who Invented the Gay Pride Rainbow Flag Comments. Time Magazine, 26 June 2012. Web. 06 Feb. 2015.

"A Brief History of the Rainbow Flag." San Francisco Travel. San Francisco Travel, n.d. Web. 04 Feb. 2015.

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