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A Thousand Splendid Suns. An Analysis of Chapters 1-5. THEMES IN CHAPTERS 1-5. The Plight of Women : “Learn this now and learn it well, my daughter: Like a compass needle that points north, a man’s accusing finger always finds a woman. Always. You remember that, Mariam ” ( Hosseini 7)
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A Thousand Splendid Suns An Analysis of Chapters 1-5
THEMES IN CHAPTERS 1-5 • The Plight of Women: “Learn this now and learn it well, my daughter: Like a compass needle that points north, a man’s accusing finger always finds a woman. Always. You remember that, Mariam” (Hosseini 7) • Women and Education: “What’s the sense schooling a girl like you? Its like shining a spittoon. And you’ll learn nothing of value in those schools. There is only one, only one skill a woman like you and me needs in life, and they don’t teach it in school” (Hosseini 18) • Endurance and Inner Strength: “It’s our lot in life, Mariam. Women like us. We endure. Its all we have. Do you understand” (Hosseini 19) • Illusion vs. Reality (and Human Capacity for Evil): “He let her sleep on the street. On the street.” (Hosseini 35)
Symbols • Kolba in the midst of weeping willows (constant suffering): “…there was a circular grove of weeping willow trees. In the center, in the shade of the willows, was the clearing” (9) • Pebbles (hope for a family, to belong): “The pebbles spilled from her pocket” (35)
Character Development: Mariam • A dutiful and respectful daughter • Respects her mom and listens to her bitter comments • Enjoys hearing stories • Appreciates education • Always sees her mother in a negative light and presents Jalil and his sons in a more positive light • Longs for a family • Is in constant search for happiness which she only finds in Jalil and Mullah Faizullah • Gullible /naïve
Character Development: Nana • Bitter and angry • Loves Mariam but is incapable of showing it • Pessimistic • Verbally aggressive and abusive • Selfish, incapable of sympathizing and empathizing • Superficial • Controlling and conniving • Dislikes company, enjoys solitude
Character Development: Jalil • Bound by duty • Thinks he can protect Mariam from harm but fails • Uses wealth to seek redemption • Cowardly • A victim to the status quo
Chapters 1-5 from the Marxist Perspective • Jalil: elite Bourgeoisie class • ability to mold his environment (and the people within that environment) to his liking (power that comes with being upper class) • Role of money and wealth in seeking redemption • Single women part of working class and living in poverty • Jalil controls both Mariam’s and Nana’s futures/fates (they are at his mercy) • “She liked that no matter the weather he always wore a suit on his visits –dark brown, his favorite color, with the white triangle of a handkerchief in the breast pocket-and cufflinks too, and a tie, usually red, which he left loosened” (21)
Chapters 1-5: Psychoanalytic Perspective • Oedipus Complex: Jalil and Mariam • Only male figure in her life • The relationship between father and daughter is romanticized • “But there was no one, no one, that Mariam longed to see more than Jalil” (20) • “Mariam would leap to her feet when she spotted him hopping stones across the stream, all smiles and hearty waves” (21) • “Later, after Jalil went home, Mariam and Nana had a small fight about this. Mariam said she had tricked him” (22)
Afghan Politics: Early 1970s • 1973: King Zahir Shah is overthrown by bloodless coup led by Daoud Khan • Afghanistan is no longer a monarchy; it becomes a republic : “The Republic of Afghanistan” (www.afghan-web.com) • No overlap of political and personal spheres
Discussion Questions • 1. Nana is a complex character. Do you think Nana’s comments on the dangers of mainstream society is an attempt to protect her only child or is it a selfish way of keeping Mariam within her handhold? • 2. A. Would you allow your child to do something which you already know will NOT help them in any way? • B. Do you think Nana made the correct decision by robbing Mariam of an education? • 3. What was your opinion about Jalil when we are first introduced to him. How does your perspective of him change following the incident that occurred on Mariam’s fifteenth birthday?