In the book, The Bean Trees by Barbara Kingsolver, there are many different moments in the book that show what women may go through in their lifetime. Getting pregnant, moving away, people leaving, being alone, and other situations that still occur today. The main character Taylor moves in with Lou Ann, and young woman who was just left by her husband. She is caring for a child on her own and didn’t understand the struggle some women go through, until she decides to visit the strip club in her town, with a painting lady on the wall. “Lou Ann shuddered.…
2. The pomegranate tree is a symbol of the different stages of Hassan and Amir's friendship. "One summer day, I used one of Ali's kitchen knives to carve our names on it: "Amir and Hassan, the sultans of Kabul.' Those words made it formal: the tree was ours" (26). This quote represents Amir and Hassan's relationship between them during their early childhood. They are extremely close and carving their names on the tree shows that they will be a part of each other's lives as long as they live. This is true because even though their friendship ends up deteriorating eventually and Amir moves to America, they still carry their memories of each other to their adulthood and think about one another constantly. "Then Hassan did pick up a pomegranate. He walked toward me. He opened it and crushed it against his own forehead. "There," he croaked, red dripping down his face like blood. "Are you satisfied? Do you feel better"(93)? When this happens, it marks Amir and Hassan starting to become distant, which also happens to be at the pomegranate tree. When Hassan crushes the pomegranate on his own forehead, it symbolizes their friendship starting to become crushed and them splitting apart. The juice from the pomegranate "dripping down Hassan's face like blood" relates to later on in the story when Amir discovers Hassan's death and thinks that Hassan's blood was on his hands. "A pair of crows sat on the low wall that enclosed the cemetery. Hassan had said in his letter that the pomegranate tree hadn't borne food in years. Looking at the wilted, leafless tree, I doubted it ever would again" (264). The pomegranate tree being dead represents Amir and Hassan's friendship being dead completely. Their friendship can't be restored anymore because Hassan is now dead and Amir will never be able to show him that he is sorry for what he did in the past and how he tried to make up for it, which is expressed when Amir says that he doubts the tree would ever…
Im a writing an easy on the book The Kite Runner written by Khaled Hosseini. I am going to explain how Hosseini use symbolism to reflect important themes or ideas in his novel. Themes of guilt and redemption feature many times in this novel. In the book The Kite Runner Hosseini Uses many symbols and themes but what I am going to talk about first is the symbols he uses.…
Within the story The Kite Runner by Khaled Hosseini, their are several qualities of the characters that are discovered by the audience. This help readers understand the relationships these characters have with one another. The relationship between Amir and Hassan is quite different than the ideal friendship individuals see in today’s society. While Amir is a Pashtun, Hassan is Hazara which is not as accepted in their society, since the majority is Pashtun. Throughout the novel, readers learn more about how their religious differences separate and change their friendship.…
Imagine the experience of living under the rule of a violent group of terrorists, with no freedom whatsoever. This is what it is like to Najmah in the book Under the Persimmon Tree, by Suzanne Fisher Staples. In this realistic setting, Najmah, the main character, loses most of her family due to the brutality and imposition of the Taliban. The novel depicted the Taliban as dangerous and strict, which is interchangeable for what the Taliban is like in reality. Staples used the Taliban conflict to deepen the reader's understanding of the impact of conflict on people's lives.…
In conclusion, the way Oliver uses, “The Black Walnut Tree,” to convey the relationship between a tree and a family is impelling. The figurative language used to describe the journey a mother and daughter go through to make ends meet relates to society now. Many families travel through months at a time, not knowing if they would have to sell something valuable, when they would run out of money, or when money would become hard to get, however they still remain strong and make wise…
TEXTBOOK – Krough, BIOLOGY a guide to the natural world, 5th edition, 2011. Pearson Education Inc.…
The Kite Runner is an Afghan American fiction novel written by Khaled Hosseini. In the text the story of a man, named Amir’s, past is told. In continuation, a reader of the novel may get the impression, at the beginning of the book, that Amir is just an ungrateful child that receives everything he wants, but in reality that is not the case. Throughout his journey he dealt with various hardships that inflicted drastic alterations on it. As readers explore a journey down memory lane with Amir, a magnitude of themes is presented through the challenges that Amir faces. Ultimately, the trials and tribulation that people face help mold them into who they are.…
Khaled Hosseini’s The Kite Runner tells the haunting tale of redemption and how one choice could lead to a life regret and guilt. The story details the life of Amir, and the way he allowed a mistake to unfold, continuing a damning cycle his father Baba started. Yet this man who started the lie first appears as an icon of morality and determination. However, as each page unfolds it is unraveled that he is flawed just like the rest. Through Hosseini’s characterization of Baba, it is revealed that he is a man who donned the armor of morality, hiding the mistakes he committed within.…
While Amir and Hassan were young and lighthearted and as close as a servant and master can be, they inscribe their names in the tree, and it bears fruit. Thus, the tree symbolizes their relationship. Years later, however, after Hassan is dead and Amir is exhausted with remorse, the tree, just like Amir's memories, still exists but no longer bears fruit. The tree not only symbolizes a uniting strength between Amir and Hassan but also serves as a source of detachment. Amir wants Hassan to hit him with the pomegranate fruit in order to inflict a physical punishment to lessen his guilt as a partial equalizer; instead, Hassan breaks the fruit over his own head causing Amir more…
In “Only Ten,” Allan Baillie explores Hussein’s journey and his transformation from being consumed by fear and trepidation to feeling a sense security and stability. Similarly, to “Wanderlust” the journey allows one to escape loneliness and experience the brightness of life. The representation of the alive and fruitful plants evoking inner peace is explored in “smelling the fruit, pressing at the earth and even listening to the leaves” contrasting his desolate past in Iran. The repetition of “nothing” in “nothing green, nothing growing” emphasizes the lifelessness of his childhood and explores his need to seek inner peace found in the brightness of the plants. This concept mirrors, the persona in “Wanderlust” having the desire to escape her…
A man is insensible to appreciate prosperity until he has tasted adversity. Adverse situations shape an individual’s identity and play a significant role in one’s life by shaping personal values, determining one’s own potential and self worth. Khaled Hosseini conveys how hardships shape individuals identities through the characters of Amir, Baba, Hassan and Ali in his novel The Kite Runner. Like every individual they go through a series of incidents and hardships that shape who they become and how well they deal with struggles in life. Life is not about finding one’s own self, but about creating and learning from experiences.…
P5: A student describes the ways different technologies and media of production affect the language and structure of particular texts.…
Hassan has an unrequited love for Amir. He admired Amir for his knowledge; Amir would have and know things that Hassan could not. The pomegranate trees at the beginning of the movie are representative of the strong friendship that the boys share. Its bright red fruit representing new life and opportunities as they grew, and its large braches like outstretched arms sheltering them from the outside world. Hassan found refuge in Amir’s friendship just as he found refuge in the pomegranate tree. It was a positive and happy place where the boys like to play. Amir reads to Hassan underneath the trees which transport him away from his illiteracy, but just like the trees, Amir towers over him with his knowledge. Amir uses Ali’s knives to carve “Amir and Hassan, the sultans of Kabul” into the trunk of the tree. This act represented the boys bound to one another and to the tree.…
The Kite Runner by Khaled Hosseini takes the reader on a haunting journey of Amir and Hassan's friendship and displays the hardships that the two boys are faced with as a result of this friendship. Although they have many similarities, such as growing up together, feeding from the same breast and sharing many of the same experiences, Amir is a Pashtun, meaning he is favored and has a high status in society and Hassan, on the other hand, is a Hazara and Amir's servant, which means he is treated differently in society than Amir. This book focuses on the theme of kindness and how individuals can attempt to determine their own destiny by the way that they act towards others. Throughout the Kite Runner there are many events that occur where the characters are faced with difficult situations and often the outcome of the situation is a result of the action they chose to take or not take, and other times the result of their destiny is out of their control. The book begins with Amir and Hassan playing together. The book shows that as they begin to grow up, their friendship also becomes complicated. The role of kindness does play a large role when individuals attempt to determine their own destiny. Karma, what goes around comes around, is an apparent theme throughout this novel and throughout every day life. The idea of karma is the idea that how you act towards someone will catch up to you. For example, if you treat someone with respect and you are positive, then the world will return the respect and positivity to you.…