ORIENTALISM AND CULTURAL HEGEMONY IN SEXY BY JHUMPA LAHIRI: A POSTCOLONIALISM APPROACH


Date Published : 6 November 2025

Contributors

Rahmadina Vita Jannah

Author

Dyah Uyun Wulandari

Author

Qirara

Author

Ima Dyah Savitri

Author

Jiphie Gilia Indriyani

Author

Shabrina An Adzhani

Sixth Author

Keywords

Orientalism Cultural Hegemony Postcolonialism Western

Proceeding

Track

General Track

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Copyright (c) 2025 International Conference on Cultures & Languages

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This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivatives 4.0 International License.

Abstract

This paper examines the themes of orientalism and cultural hegemony in Jhumpa Lahiri’s short story Sexy through the lens of postcolonial theory, particularly Edward Said’s concept of Orientalism and Gramsci’s hegemony. The narrative explores the dynamics between Miranda, a white American woman, and Dev, a married Indian man, highlighting the fetishization of Eastern culture and the alienation faced by diasporic individuals. Lahiri portrays how the West's portrayal of the East as exotic and "other" perpetuates stereotypes, while cultural hegemony underscores the dominance of Western ideologies in shaping global standards of beauty and identity. Through Miranda’s curiosity about Indian culture and her fascination with Dev’s heritage, the story reveals how colonial legacies continue to influence perceptions and relationships. The paper argues that Lahiri’s critique in Sexy illuminates the complexities of cultural identity and power imbalance, urging readers to reconsider entrenched biases and the lingering impacts of postcolonialism. 

References

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How to Cite

Rahmadina Vita Jannah, R. V. J., Dyah Uyun Wulandari , D. U. W. ., Qirara Azamatul Aminah, Q. A. A., Ima Dyah Savitri, I. D. S., & Jiphie Gilia Indriyani, J. G. I. (2025). ORIENTALISM AND CULTURAL HEGEMONY IN SEXY BY JHUMPA LAHIRI: A POSTCOLONIALISM APPROACH. International Conference on Cultures & Languages, 3(1), 67-78. https://conferences.uinsaid.ac.id/iccl/paper/view/385