Comparing The Taliban In A Thousand Splendid Suns And Beneath The Veil

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The novel A Thousand Splendid Suns (2007) and the documentary Beneath the Veil (2001) both explore the unequal, prejudice actions of the Taliban within Afgafistan. The women were left voiceless as well as fearful for their lives which is evident through the novel and the documentary. Khaled Houssini, the writer of A Thousand Splendid Suns constructs his novel from the protagonist, Mariams, point of view. Readers are then able to understand the unjust, misogynistic actions towards the females living in Afgafistan. Similarly to A Thousand Splendid Suns is a documentary, Beneath the Veil. Narrated and produced by Sarah Shahi whom is a female westerner, she explores the outcast of women and the prejudice actions of the Taliban. Both the novel and the documentary go into depth with the confronting truths of the Taliban and Afgafistan as a whole. …show more content…

The protagonist learns that she is just a possession, an object that lives in the horrible male dominated society of Afgafistan. This is evident when her Nana tells Mariam “When I'm gone you'll have nothing. You'll have nothing. You'll be nothing.” The repetition of “nothing” conveys the harsh reality of living and existing in this misogynistic society. Mariam also learns very suddenly that she is too voiceless to the two people who are meant to love her the most. Mariam's parents always speak for her, too her and never with her. This reinforces that Mariam lives in a prejudice country. A Thousand Splendid Suns lacks effectiveness towards the theme of female oppression during the beginning of the novel as our first insight to Mariam's life is her being a voiceless object in her parents company. This gives the idea of parent dominance and age restrictions instead of the theme female oppression in the male dominated

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