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PLEASE HELP!! DOUBLE POINTS!!
In 'The Namesake' by Jhumpa Lahiri, Where does Gogol feel most at home?
Use evidence from the text to support and explain your answer.
giving BRAINLIEST to the LONGEST answer. everything helps, thank you :))

Respuesta :

In 'The Namesake' by Jhumpa Lahiri, every character is in the search of a home where to belong to, and the different houses they habitate mirror their personalities. The wealthy Ratliffs live in an extravagant mansion. Gogol's room at university is kind of disheartening. The first residence of the Ganguli's is small and uncomfortable, but full of love. If identity derives from the sense of home, it is not a surprise that Gogol has many difficulties in finding and setting up a permanent one. This may explain why he wants to become an architect (to build his own home).

But, as the story develops, the narrator acknowledges that "...is his room at Yale where Gogol feels most comfortable. He likes its oldness, its persistent grace. He likes that so many students have occupied it before him. He likes the solidity of its plaster walls, its dark wooden

floorboards, however battered and stained. He likes the dormer window he  sees first thing in the mornings when he opens his eyes and looking at Battell  Chapel. He has fallen in love with the Gothic architecture of the campus, always astonished by the physical beauty that surrounds him, that roots him to  his environs in a way he had never felt growing up on Pemberton Road." (Evidence from the text).

Thus, Gogol's transitory place of comfort turns to be his Yale dormitory rather than the house where he grew up, implying that he has more flair to get used to new places than his parents.