Here's my introduction - perhaps you might glean some phrases that you might wanna put in your conclusion:
A sense of belonging is a critical component of one’s being. The connections made with others and the larger world are affected by both internal and external influences. One person’s sense of belonging is not that of another, for perceptions of belonging vary even within icons of belonging such as families, countries and tribes. Such perceptions change over time because of the influence of socio cultural contexts and historical heritage. It is this complexity of the transformative and paradoxical nature of belonging that is the thematic focus of Peter Skrzynecki’s poems, Feliks Skrzynecki, In The Folk Museum and Postcard, which provides a means of portraying the psychological impact of the migrant experience, consisting of a multiplicity of response as opposed to simply the positive attributes and the consequences of belonging. This idea if furthered in Chinua Achebe's novel Things Fall Apart, and John Ford’s 1940 film Grapes of Wrath. These texts explore the significance and inevitable effect of context upon a sense of self; however, more importantly stress the ambivalent nature of belonging, and how the process can produce a dualistic response.