Analysis Of 'Crossing The Red Sea, And The Kite Runner'

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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

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