Amir wants to please his father because Amir would like to be a son Baba can be proud of. Baba loves his son yet he still wants Amir to be a “little Baba” because Amir doesn't stand up for himself and doesn't act as Baba would. Amir knows this and tries to be more like his father. Baba is seen as “the perfect man” because of his successfulness, strength, and personality or character. The community sees Baba this way because he is so willing to sacrifice himself for others and they have even made fables about Baba’s strength by fighting a bear and Amir views his father in the same way; as seen in the dreams Amir has and how he describes his father. Amir tries to make Baba proud of him through trying soccer but is short lived because he isn't…
The dynamics of father-son relationships are central to both novels. In The Kite Runner, Amir has a very complex relationship with his father, Baba. As much as Amir loves and reveres his father, he continually struggles to feel loved by his him. Also, Baba has difficulty connecting with Amir and conveying his love for him and can only do so in an indirect way. Baba feels guilty about being able to love Amir freely and not being able to love Hassan (also his son) the same, which is misunderstood by Amir. “With me as the glaring exception, my father molded the world around him to his liking. The problem, of course, was that Baba saw the world in black and white (Hosseni 24),” Amir laments. Unfortunately, Amir couldn’t help but defy Baba’s perception of black and white (what was proper behavior) and continuously disappointed Baba through his love of poetry and writing, his inability to play soccer, and his dislike of violence. Therefore, Amir was always searching for ways to make Baba proud.…
4. We begin to understand early in the novel that Amir is constantly vying for Baba 's attention and often feels like an outsider in his father 's life, as seen in the following passage: "He 'd close the door, leave me to wonder why it was always grown-ups time with him. I 'd sit by the door, knees drawn to my chest. Sometimes I sat there for an hour, sometimes two, listening to their laughter, their chatter." Discuss Amir 's relationship with Baba.…
Baba and Amir have two very different personalities. Throughout the book, Amir is whom the readers feel compassion for. He's always gets bullied and Baba doesn’t show him the love that he should. Baba is considered a hero and a leader. Compared to Baba, Amir is weak. He couldn’t stand up for himself. Amir likes poetry…
Kemmy Nolah once said,” Be extremely careful not break someone’s heart or to cause someone great disappointment, and never put up with people that are reckless with yours. That is why you shouldn’t force yourself to have space in anyone’s life because if they know your worth, they’ll create one for you”. (Nolah) In the novel, The Kite Runner, by Khaled Hosseini, Amirs father” Baba” is greatly responsible for determining the personality of Amir. Born without a mother and raised by his father, Amir lives with a single role model in his life who repeatedly expects more from his disappointing son. Amir is like a key while in the same way Baba is a door that has no key hole. ” With me as the glaring exception, my father molded the world around him to his liking”, (Hosseini 12). Throughout the novel Amirs character is developed in different time periods of his life involving his father. Furthermore growing up in a wealthy environment Baba did not show traits of a parent, causing Amir to betray and creates additional deceptions, which escalates Amirs life for the worst.…
Baba and Amir’s relationship is one that many know, with some different conditions. Baba may not have always been the archetypal father figure he wanted to be, but none the less Amir looked up to him with the greatest honor and occasional envy. If Baba had let go of his pride, I believe the relationship between himself and Amir would have been…
Baba is always the wise parent giving his son, Amir, a slice of life now and then. One of the times that Baba gave his son a slice of life is when Amir was in Baba’s study room. Amir was talking to Baba about his…
At the beginning of the novel, Amir is a young selfish child who cares about himself and only himself, which is evident by the choices he makes. His obsession to please Baba, his father, causes him to betray his best friend, later known to be his half-brother, Hassan. Hassan was raped by Assef, the novel’s antagonist, because he was protecting the kite Amir yearned for to satisfy Baba. Amir later confesses, “Maybe Hassan was the price I had to pay, the lamb I had to slay, to win Baba” (Hosseini 7). As a consequence, Amir lives with an abundant amount of guilt, in which he tries to avoid, but as the years crawl by, he is unable to find tranquility. His guilty conscious troubles…
This is Baba's only rule, it’s ironic because he himself is a thief. He steals Amir’s right to having a father by neglecting to be the father Amir needed. This neglect and lack of fatherly interest created a problem throughout the entire story. All Amir ever wanted was his father’s approval; however, nothing he ever did could win his father over.…
Growing up without a mother really caused Amir to look up to his father. Amir tried to make his father proud in everything he would do whether it was writing stories in his adulthood or fighting kites in his childhood. When Baba passes Amir wondered, "Baba couldn't show me the way anymore; I'd have to find it on my own" (Hosseini 174). Baba was a man of great honor and in Amir's eyes he seemed to make little to no mistakes. Because of his high amount of respect for his father, Amir feels as though he should right his wrongs with Hassan because he knew that Baba loved and truly cared for Hassan. When Hassan and his father, Ali, left it devastated Baba. As Baba mourns their departure Amir states that he "... saw Baba do something I had never seen him do before: He cried" (Hosseini 107). Baba never showed emotion. For Baba to breakdown and actually cry at the fact that Hassan and Ali are gone conveys that he loves and cares for them both. Amir experiencing this display of emotion by his strong father influences him to help Hassan out in any way he…
It is Baba’s choice that set the story of Amir and Hasan into motion. His brief moment of infidelity and the fact he was never able to fully claim his illegitimate son led to a chronicle of events that defined Amir. However, it was not only this choice that came to affect the people around him. The way he raised Amir under the constant pressure of being someone he was not, ultimately led for his son to believe he needed to prove his worth. During the kite contest Amir confesses that he needs to “Show [Baba] once and for all that his son was worthy” (56), showcasing a boy who has the incessant need to prove his self-worth. Despite this Baba never truly accepted his son as he was, and even confessed that Amir is “A boy who won’t stand up for himself” (22). Throughout the majority of his life, Baba tried his best to shape Amir into the son he designed. Just like how he bends the world into his liking Baba sought to mold Amir to be just like him. In the end, however, it was revealed that he was merely a man with a “tortured soul” (301), who saw redemption in the marks he would leave the…
Both fathers in the novel, Baba and General Taheri, share similar characteristics in their relationships and personality traits. Both Baba and General Taheri are very focused on maintaining an honorable social status. How others view them in the public is a high priority for both of them. Their pride is all they can hold onto in some of the difficult situations in the novel. Neither of these fathers have a perfect health record in this novel as they also have to battle their low moments of weakness. Baba is diagnosed with cancer after him and Amir travel to America, which challenges his choices on treatment and finances. Baba keeps his grudge against any Russians as he is angry how his doctor was a Russian. This hits them mentally along with…
This came about when Baba’s darkest secret was revealed by Rahim Khan. The secret was that Baba had slept with Ali’s wife Sanaubar and impregnated her, making Hassan his child. Amir went through a series of mixed emotions at this revelation. Initially the news made Amir furious. He thought of his father as a hypocrite due to all of the lessons he had thought him in his past. Baba once told Amir, ‘There is only one sin – ‘and that is theft…When you tell a lie, you steal someone’s right to the truth.’ (Pg.225) Due to this lesson, Amir couldn’t help but think that Baba’s theft was the worst kind of stealing, since “the things he’d stolen had been sacred: from me the right to know I had a brother, from Hassan his identity, and from Ali his honor.” (Pg.225). As Amir reflected on his father’s deception and betrayal, he started to see himself in a similar way. Amir realized that his father was more like him than he ever knew and this is when their relationship made the final shift. He saw how much they were one and the same. His feelings towards his father finally changed. “Baba and I were more alike than I’d ever known. We had both betrayed the people who would have given their lives for us.”(Pg.226). Amir finally realizes that Baba was a man who also made mistakes and lived with regret. He recognized that the negative behaviors he had witnessed from his father, came from the struggles he had while trying to deal with the guilt and failures of the past. In the same way Amir had also suffered from the terrible things he had done. The big difference is at the end of the day Baba was a better man than Amir was, but Amir knew he had time to change this. From here on, Amir took on the task of redeeming both his and Baba’s mistakes. He agreed to go on the search for Hassan’s orphaned son Sohrab and to take care of him and raise him like he was his…
Family relationships play a great part in this novel but mothers are strikingly absent. Amir and Hassan grow up without their mothers and this is exemplified through the tension of Baba’s treatment of his sons. He makes it clear he is disappointed Amir is bookish, cowardly to protect his social standing and stick up for Hassan whilst on the other hand, he never publically acknowledges Hassan as his own son- although he shows a great deal of affection to Hassan.…
e.g. Amir waiting to be approve from Baba as his own son because he doesn't have the necessary attributes that Baba wants which motivated Amir to strive as his purpose. “ “…