2. The novel is called Brick Lane because of the street in the East End of London on which the action takes place. But “bricks” have a wider implication—see Hasina’s words on p. 121 and especially the narrator’s meditation on “the pile of bricks” on p. 66. Consider the implications of the relationship between bricks and life that the novel seems to posit. or
3) On page 22, Nazeen, newly arrived in England, watches a pair of ice-skaters on television; on the last pages of the novel (414-415), surrounded by her daughters and her friend Razia, she is about to get on the rink herself. Consider as fully as you can the consequent meaning of ice-skating in the novel.
Due Dec. 3