This thesis was submitted for the degree of Master of Philosophy and awarded by Brunel UniversityQuestions of human being and identity have been around for centuries. But questions of belonging and identity politics in Britain have only upsurged since the large-scale waves of postwar immigration in the latter part of the twentieth century, especially from the Indian Subcontinent. Across the Atlantic, this era has also seen the birth of affect theory in 1962 with the publication of the Affect Imagery Consciousness by the American psychologist Silvan Solomon Tomkins. From an affective perspective, this thesis discusses feminist questions about women’s (un)belongings in selected novels by the British South Asian women writers Suntra Gutpa, Mee...