Journeys give us the ability to explore the world with an insightful perspective. A matured perspective is developed when the features of a journey significantly affect us. Crossing the Red Sea, and Postcard by Peter Skrzynecki and The Kite Runner by Khaled Hosseini represent these features. Crossing the Red Sea demonstrates the concept of being stripped from your innocence, a healing process whilst on the journey and the persistence of the past on journeys. Postcard portrays the confronting and lingering attributes of incomplete journeys. Similarly, The Kite Runner highlights the confronting nature of journeys. The three texts establish the idea that a journey delivers changed perspectives towards one’s self and his/her surroundings.
The Kite
…show more content…
Understated sarcasm appears in the title of the postcard: ‘Warsaw: Panorama of the Old Town.’ A panorama connotes to bliss, beauty, appeal, yet we already know the persona does not find the post card appealing. This furthers the significance of one’s past on their journey, because Skrzynecki’s disengagement from his culture now ‘haunts me [him]’. Skrzynecki’s antithesis is in the descriptions of his parents’ reactions and his own. They are speaking of precious Warsaw and ‘Beloved Ukraine’ while the speaker is conveying the opposite sentiment: ‘I repeat, I never knew you, / Let me be.’ He reinforces this sentiment by intensifying the ideas associated with Warsaw. Skrzynecki’s reluctance to undertake a journey that explores his own culture and past, prevents him from gaining an essential perception of his identity, thus heightening the purpose of his …show more content…
The imagery of the migrants in ‘shackles, sunken eyes, secrets and exiles’ represents them as if they are trying to escape their homeland. Their sunken eyes also conveys their displacement due to the war’s adversity and the shackles further emphasises their oppression and loss of innocence caused by the war. The sea being personified with the words ‘kindness’ and ‘calmness’ indicate its healing effect and tranquillity in the migrants ‘walled-up griefs’. However, their loss of loved ones is conveyed through the implication of the healing and soothing of their family. Amir experiences the same healing towards the end of the events in the text when he adopts Hassan’s son and is given the chance to, as his father figure says, ‘be good again’. The likeness of loss of innocence in both The Kite Runner and Crossing the Red Sea suggests it is a part of a journey and contributes to its purpose of changing perspectives. The symbolism in a ‘field of red poppies’ is juxtaposed to blood, providing yet another indication that the past is inescapable. Amir’s past is also inescapable since he struggles to accept his past and can only find comfort if he returns to his home country. The journey Skrzynecki writes about is a source of easing from emotional seclusion, shown metaphorically in ’Voices left their caves/Silence fell from its shackles,’ creating an uncertain mood of
Page 2 - “I sat on a park bench near a willow tree. I thought about something Rahim Khan said just before he hung up, almost as an afterthought. I looked up at those twin kites.”
Experiences of journeys provide insights into the lives of individuals and the world around them
Throughout all texts discussed, there is a pervasive and unmistakable sense of journey in its unmeasurable and intangible form. The journeys undertaken, are not physically transformative ones but are journeys which usher in an emotional and spiritual alteration. They are all life changing anomaly’s that alter the course and outlook each individual has on their life. Indeed, through the exploitation of knowledge in both a positive and negative context, the canvassed texts accommodate the notion that journeys bear the greatest magnitude when they change your life in some fashion.
A journey is the act of travelling from one place to another. Physical journeys in particular involve this simple process, though a physical journey includes more than just movement. Also involved are the challenges and obstacles which face the traveller emotionally. The adventures of Huckleberry Finn, written by Mark Twain, and Ahn Do’s memoir, The Happiest Refugee, both exhibit this concept of an underlying journey that lays the fundamental bulding blocks of characters. These two texts offer an insight of the emotional side of a journey.
The Kite Runner is a mix of an epic and a tragedy. I will argue how the text highlights a Hero’s Journey with characteristics of a tragedy.
The movie The Kite Runner is based on the book and it contains both subtle and explicit differences as all books and movies do. Both the book and the movie have very compelling and moralistic themes though at times the movie’s themes seem limited. The themes presented throughout the movie and the book are penance, loyalty, prejudice, religion and growing up. The characterization, overall plot of the movie and the setting of the book seem to be consistent with each other though at times they both may vary both slightly and drastically.
The hardships that life reveals can either affect a person in a negative or positive way. They can strengthen or weaken the development of one’s character. Khaled Hosseni’s The Kite Runner is a novel that tells the story of two boys – Amir and Hassan, his childhood friend and servant– who spend their lives attempting to overcome their obstacles. These obstacles create experiences that will shape them for the rest of their lives. Firstly, Hassan and Amir share similar hardships, however Hassan learns and grows from them, and Amir lingers over the negativity, allowing it to destroy his life instead of moving forward. Secondly, Amir is always rescued, which allows him to feel a sense of entitlement, while Hassan fights his own battles, resulting in a greater amount of inner strength. Lastly, as Amir and Hassan become adults in opposite ends of the world, they battle hardships that are very different. The differences within their adulthood continue to show who is the more honourable character. Ultimately, in Khaled Hosseni's The Kite Runner, Hassan is a stronger character than Amir, despite the fact that they both battle similar hardships.
The theme of this book is that the human capacity to adapt to and find happiness in the most difficult circumstances. Each character in the novel shows this in their way. For instance, their family is randomly taken from their home and forced to work but they still remain a close nit family. In addition, they even manage to stick together after being separated for one of their own. These show how even in the darkest time they still manage to find a glimmer of hope and they pursued on.
There are numerous methods to store and present information, each with their own benefits and drawbacks. As a result of this, whenever a creative work is adapted into a new medium, the source material is altered to optimize the communication of the original ideas. After reading the novel The Kite Runner by Khaled Hosseini and analysing the merits and faults of the film adaptation, it can be concluded that the adaptation deserves praise. This assertion is based on the success of three elements employed by the filmmakers when converting the novel to film, notably, the exclusion of unnecessary plot, the representation of Afghan culture, and the interpretation of major scenes. While there are several reasons to hold this film in high esteem,
The Kite Runner by Khaled Hosseini is a novel based in Afghanistan that shows the betrayal between two boys with two different social backgrounds. Four years later “The Kite Runner” was filmed by David Benioff, which shows the meaningful message that the book delivers in a movie. Throughout the book and movie, Amir the protagonist must live the rest of his life with guilt from his childhood. Although the movie gave the same meaningful message that the book delivered, the book was further developed, which had more detail and kept the readers wanting more. Ultimately these details that were present in the novel gave the readers a better understanding of the characters, which led to the relationships
A physical journey occurs as a direct result of travelling from one place to another over land, sea or even space. The physical journey can occur individually or collectively, but always involves more than mere movement. Instead physical journeys are accompanied by inner growth and development, catalysed by the experiences and the decisions that impact the outcome of the journey. These journey concepts and the interrelationship between physical and emotional journeys is exemplified in the text; The Adventures of Huckleberry Finn by Mark Twain, The Road Not Taken by Robert Frost, the children’s book Lost and Found by Oliver Jeffers and the film Stand By Me directed by Rob Reiner.
Mastery of the material an author writes about is not merely enough to get one’s point across, yet Butor uses his mastery of how to travel wherever you are in life and, in addition, uses language that presents the picture in such a manner that one does not have to delve deep into the meaning behind the words to retain the full idea portrayed in them. The higher arching purpose to his work, though, turns out to be the overall connection of ties between the book and travel ultimately depends on the book’s “literariness” to determine what journey one might have while reading (83). All in all, the tone of voice and writing style that Butor uses in this piece are second to none in their ability to influence a reader of following his procedure of travel transformation, and a rhetorical analysis essay on his work only reassured the authenticity of the section about how Butor chose to entertain the reader as the main purpose behind his essay. His attitude toward the audience was strong enough to elicit advice that originated straight from the heart, and in doing that, he empowered readers with the ability to look at books and reading differently for the rest of their
The books “A Thousand Splendid Suns” and “The Kite Runner” are both written by Khaled Hosseini. The setting of both of the book is in the capital of Afghanistan, which is Kabul. Both books express the themes of betrayal, discrimination, and also redemption; but both novels depict the themes and characters in different ways. Even though the main characters are very much alike.
A journey narrative, used as both an archetypal plot structure, and a device that informs and facilitates character development, is an enduring literary trope, likely as old as literature itself. The mere fact that journey narratives have persisted, without inherently being regarded as overused, outdated, or clichéd, is indicative of the impact they have when executed effectively. Additionally, this is a testament to the technique’s adaptability, and capacity to integrate within, and complement, various styles and genres. Conventional journey narratives generally follow a basic pattern, leading to an expectation that vast, far-reaching journeys should inherently be reflected by significant emotional growth, and meaningful moments of clarity
... executed in order to set off into the world alone. The influence that independent travel has on an individual is a splendor upon riches because it does so much for a person, and provides humans with a sense of the world. How a person can makes new friends and learn about new cultures and accept other people’s way of living. With its educational purposes traveling alone can bring, offers an endless amount of living data that tops any history book or internet page. Traveling is concrete history that is continuing around everyone. It can provide people to look through different lenses and experience aspects of life that they know they will never experience again in their lifetimes. Traveling alone provides an endless journey and an empty page in the minds scrapbook that is waiting to be filled with new memories and the endless amount of true belonging and bliss.