the novel‚ Amir and Hassan have a very close brotherly relationship when they are alone. Amir is afraid to be Hassan’s true friend in public because they are from two different social classes (Amir being a Pashtun and Hassan being a Hazara). Hazaras are thought of to be lower class and should not be fraternizing with upper class Pashtuns. Amir tests Hassan’s loyalty and resents Hassan because he is secretly jealous of him. Baba is always treating Hassan like a more favored son than Amir even though
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In “The Kite Runner” by Khaled Hosseini‚ Hassan is presented as Amir’s foil‚ but Amir’s negative morals are not permanent. The novel walks the reader through Amir’s transforming personality‚ all caused by guilt and atonement. Despite Amir’s transformation from being unscrupulous to becoming moral and Hassan’s virtuousness‚ there are elements that make them very similar. Amir and Hassan are very different in their social status. Amir comes from a rich Pashtun family. Due to his caste‚ he
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Memorable Quotes * edit * | see section history * | show spoilers * “Nothing happens to me anymore. That’s the reality of getting old‚ and I guess that’s really the crux of the matter. I’m not ready to be old yet.” Jacob * “In the entire history of our marriage‚ it was the only secret I kept from her‚ and eventually it became impossible to fix. With a secret like that‚ at some point the secret itself becomes irrelevant. The fact that you kept it does not.” Jacob *
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In ‘The Kite Runner’‚ Hosseini presents the relationship between Amir and Hassan as more of a social class hierarchy rather than a friendship which Hassan longs. Amir seems to realise his bad treatment towards Hassan‚ but despite them having grown up together he still neglects Hassan and fails to apologise for his wrongdoings. This is shown in chapter seven in which it reads: “Still‚ I had been mean to Hassan. I almost apologised‚ then didn’t …Hassan always understood about me”. This quote explains
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I am currently half way through the book‚ “ The Kite Runner”‚ and there are many themes that have emerged. One for example‚ is the unwavering loyalty Hassan feels towards Amir. His undeserving admiration is obvious in passages such as the one on page 57. “ “Would I ever lie to you‚ Amir agha?” Suddenly I decided to toy with him. “I don’t know. Would you?” “I’d sooner eat dirt‚” he said with a look of indignation. “Really? You’d do that?” He threw me a puzzled look. “Do what?” “Eat dirt if I told
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(116) "I had one last chance to make a decision. One final opportunity to decide who I was going to be. I could step into that alley‚ stand up for Hassan‚ and accept whatever would happen to me. Or I could run. I ran." (77) "It was suprising how well we got alongin these weeks. Sometimes I found it hard to remember his treachery‚ sometimes I discovered myself thoughtlessly slipping bak into afection for him again."(55) "He knew I’d betrayed him and yet he was rescuing me once again‚ maybe
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Loyalty and Betrayal The Kite Runner‚ written by Khalid Hosseni is a novel‚ which follows the life of childhood friends Amir and Hassan who grew up together in Afghanistan during the seventies. Both had very different family backgrounds; Amir is the only son of a rich and powerful businessman while‚ Hassan’s father is a servant in Amir’s family. Amir and Hassan spent most of their free time together despite having very different personalities. This novel is told from the first person perspective
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In the novel‚ The Kite Runner‚ the central character‚ Amir‚ narrates his personal journey from childhood to present-day adulthood. As a child‚ Amir is a member of a privileged Kabul upper class‚ until the Russian invasion of Afghanistan in 1978. Throughout the text‚ Amir experiences events that both cause his powerful and conflicting emotions and reveal his flaws and sins. It is his honest and heartfelt response to his wrongdoing that draws a positive connection from the reader. Although his sins
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brutality of the situation. Amir had visited the stadium this scene took place in before the Taliban took over. When he revisited the stadium as a tourist in Afghanistan it was completely different. It was no longer a place of happiness to watch sports it was a place of evil for the Taliban to kill innocent people. The evilness of the Taliban was hidden in the mix of the evil in Afghanistan. The people in Afghanistan now only know evil‚ but with Amir revisiting and blind to how bad it has actually gotten
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really asked‚ he wouldn’t deny me. Hassan never denied me anything. And he was deadly with his slingshot. Hassan’s father‚ Ali‚ used to catch us and get mad‚ or as mad as someone as gentle as Ali could ever get. He would wag his finger and wave us down from the tree. He would take the mirror and tell us what his mother had told him‚ that the devil shone mirrors too‚ shone them to distract Muslims during prayer. "And he laughs while he does it‚" he always added‚ scowling at his son. "Yes‚ Father‚" Hassan
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