THEMES
“There is a way to be good again" (1.3).
“real brains of the government" as Farid says (21.12). http://www.freedigitalphotos.net/images/Leadership_g403-Leader_With_Team_on_jigsaw_puzzle_p93547.html
“That was a long time ago, but it’s wrong what they say about the past, I’ve learned, about how you can bury it. Because the past claws its way out. Looking back now, I realize I have been peeking into that deserted alley for the last twenty-six years.”
Report:
Throughout the story a variety of themes are portrayed by the author. The three that stood out the most include the search for redemption, the intersection between politics and personal lives, and the persistence of the past.
Earlier in the novel, Amir feels the need to make a big impact, and make Baba feel happy. Knowing that his mother had a huge choice to sacrifice her life for him, Amir feels like he has to fill a huge void. In order to make Baba proud, Amir though that winning the kite running tournament would make Baba a proud father and change their relationship. A big search for redemption in this novel involves Amir’s guilt resulting from not helping out Hassan when he was in desperate need. Throughout the last half of the novel, most of Amir’s decisions result from his feeling of guilt towards Hassan. He feels as if he needs to make up for what he had done. Early in the book Baba explains to Amir that “a boy who doesn’t stand up for himself becomes a man who can’t stand up to anything.” Amir feels like that has to change when he becomes an Adult, standing up for what was right.
The impact of politics and personal lives had a dramatic change in the novel’s plot. When Amir and Hassan were children, Kabul seemed like a calm and beautiful place. The plot slowly began to change after the Soviet invasion and from there Kabul got worse and worse. The establishment of the republic gave Assef the opportunity to harass Amir. When the Taliban’s began to take over, Baba and Amir were basically forced to flee to America. With the Taliban controlling most of Kabul, Assef was given a major role and Hassan had been murdered. These events change Amir’s destiny, later making him go back to Kabul.
Most of the characters in the novel feel a tremendous amount of influence from the past. Sohrab’s past really affects his behaviour in the novel. The physical and sexual abuse he had gone through makes him scared, insecure, and he no longer can trust anyone. He later attempts to commit suicide because of his parent’s death, and not wanting to go back to the orphanage. In Amir’s case the past changed his destiny. He would never forget and let go from the day he watched Hassan get raped. In the beginning of the book Amir says “I had become what I am today, at the age of twelve.” Later in the novel Amir uses his past guilt and poor decisions as motivation to save Sohrab.



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