Analysis Of Khaled Hossenini's 'The Kite Runner'

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There has never been a time in human history that the obstacle of living up to society 's standards has not existed. Everyone has been influenced by the ever growing list of trends; like the Chinese binding their feet so make them smaller, or the Western’s attraction to have an hourglass figure. Fads exist in political and domestic life and can correlate. Either way, these trends can welcome a healthy society or promote hate. The fictional story The Kite Runner by Khaled Hossenini, depicts the journey of friendship between an Afghan boy, Amir, and his Hazaran friend as well as servant, Hassan, after Amir witnesses Hassan’s rape. Riddled with guilt from not intervening, and the jealousy of the father-son relationship between Amir’s father and Hassan, Amir regrettably ends their friendship, and loses contact after he and his father immigrate to the United States. Hossenini illustrates using …show more content…

Whether to family, friends, or to authority figures, people are continuously trying to prove themselves worthy of other people’s time. In some cases, this can be a long and strenuous battle, and ultimately degrades a person 's confidence. Amir’s continuous battle to earn his Father, Baba’s, pride results in a strained relationship between father and son. It as well clouds Amir’s judgment enough to act as reason to not intervene to stop Hassan 's rape. He instead runs back to show his father he won the kite race. This leads to Amir to feel a mass source of guilt for the rest of his life. In the chase for Baba’s approval, he produces a untruthful version of himself to Baba, going to sports events and

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