Ratings3
Average rating3.7
"Provocative and knotty . . . Identitti is a bracing story, one in which Sanyal refuses to give us the easy way out." —Olivia Craighead, The New York Times Nivedita (a.k.a. Identitti), a well-known blogger and doctoral student is in awe of her supervisor—superstar postcolonial and race studies South-Asian professor Saraswati. But her life and sense of self are turned upside down when it emerges that Saraswati is actually white. Nivedita’s praise of her professor during a radio interview just hours before the news breaks—and before she learns the truth—calls into question her own reputation as a young activist. Following the uproar, Nivedita is forced to reflect on the key moments in her life, when she doubted her identity and her place in the world. As debates on the scandal rage on social media, blogs, and among her closest friends, Nivedita’s assumptions are called into question as she reconsiders the lessons she learned from her adored professor. In her thought-provoking, genre-bending debut, Mithu Sanyal solicited the contributions and commentary of public intellectuals as if Saraswati were a real person. A darkly comedic tour de force, Identitti showcases the outsized power of social media in the current debates about identity politics and the power of claiming your own voice.
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It takes a bit to find your footing within this books, because you're smacked right into the chaos of a race-scandal set in postcolonial-academia. So many thoughts and conversations about racial identity and race theory, in all forms (tweets, radio interviews, blog posts, hallucinatory conversation with Hindu goddess Kali). Sometimes there's too much chatter, and you wish you could just spend time with Nivedita and Priti and their friends, without having to think so hard. But, this book is definitely educational (note the footnotes at the end), and does well in showing you all the conflicting emotions and evolutions associated to racial identities. Ahem, identitties.
I was quite impressed by the fact that most of the online reactions in the book are associated to their real-life personae who gave their permission to be represented. I thought I recognized one name, excuse my ignorance. I imagine reading this book must be quite a ride if you're at home in that specific scene.