The most important part of the girls becoming Americanized in this story is how Nea sees her sister. She says, "You sound like an old lady. You're only twenty, for Chrissake. You don't have to live like this. Ma is wrong. You can be anything, Sourdi'" (Chai 142). Nea realizes that they do not have to live their lives like they did before, and that anything is possible here, and that is the most important part of truly becoming an American.
In "Clothes," it is easier to see the Americanization of the main character, because she comes to America in the story, and has never been there before. Everything is new to her, and she becomes Americanized partly to please her husband and partly because she likes the life. She tries on American clothes, but sometimes she is frightened by everything new around her. The author writes, "But at other times I feel caught in a world where everything is frozen in place, like a scene inside a glass paperweight. It is a world so small that if I were to stretch out my arms, I would touch its cold unyielding edges" (Divakaruni 278). She does not welcome everything about America like the sisters in the other story. There are many things that frighten her, and it is more difficult for her to feel like an American and embrace the American lifestyle. However, when tragedy comes to her life, she discovers that she truly is an American, and that she can never go back to India, she has changed too much. The author writes, "That when I know I cannot go back. I don't know yet how I'll manage here in this new, dangerous land. I only know I...
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