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==Literary focus== Lahiri's writing is characterized by her "plain" language and her characters, often Indian immigrants to America who must navigate between the cultural values of their homeland and their adopted home.<ref name= "atlant">Chotiner, Isaac. [https://www.theatlantic.com/doc/200802u/jhumpa-lahiri "Interviews: Jhumpa Lahiri"] {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20080509102027/http://www.theatlantic.com/doc/200802u/jhumpa-lahiri |date=May 9, 2008 }}, [[The Atlantic]], March 18, 2008. Retrieved on 2008-04-12.</ref><ref name= "newsw">Lahiri, Jhumpa. [http://www.newsweek.com/id/46810 "My Two Lives"] {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20100107043025/http://www.newsweek.com/id/46810 |date=January 7, 2010 }}, [[Newsweek]], March 6, 2006. Retrieved on 2008-04-13.</ref> Lahiri's fiction is [[autobiographical novel|autobiographical]] and frequently draws upon her own experiences as well as those of her parents, friends, acquaintances, and others in the [[Bengali people|Bengali]] communities with which she is familiar. Lahiri examines her characters' struggles, anxieties, and biases to chronicle the nuances and details of immigrant psychology and behavior. Until ''Unaccustomed Earth'', she focused mostly on first-generation Indian American [[immigration|immigrants]] and their struggle to raise a family in a country very different from theirs. Her stories describe their efforts to keep their children acquainted with [[culture of India|Indian culture and traditions]] and to keep them close even after they have grown up to hang onto the Indian tradition of a [[Hindu joint family|joint family]], in which the parents, their children and the children's families live under the same roof. ''[[Unaccustomed Earth]]'' departs from this earlier original ethos, as Lahiri's characters embark on new stages of development. These [[short story|stories]] scrutinize the fate of the [[immigrant generations|second and third generations]]. As succeeding generations become increasingly [[cultural assimilation|assimilated]] into American culture and are comfortable in constructing perspectives outside of their country of origin, Lahiri's fiction shifts to the needs of the individual. She shows how later generations depart from the constraints of their immigrant parents, who are often devoted to their community and their responsibility to other immigrants.<ref>Lahiri, J.. ''Unaccustomed Earth''.</ref>
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