Zusammenfassung der Ressource
Chapter 4
- Characterisation
- Ali
- His story is
revealed at the
beginning
'Five-year-old
orphan boy
before my
grandfather...'
- Ali's relationship with Baba
- 'Ali and
Baba grew
up together
as
childhood
playmates...'
- Compared to Hassan
and Amir's relationship
- Hassan and Baba are
sismilar in the way in which
they both betrayed the people
they grew up with.
- Hassan
- Hassan and
Amir's relationship
- '...just like Hassan
and I grew up...'
- 'I never thought of
Hassan and me as
friends either.'
- Ethnic
differences 'In the
end I was a
Pashtun and he
was a Hazara...
nothing was
going to change
that. Nothing.'
- Foreshadowing
that this will
affect their
relationship in
the future
- Childhood
Innocence
- Baba
- Made to look
very mean and
unloving, but
also superior
- 'His
glare
made
my
throat
feel
dry.'
- 'Baba
went on
staring me
down...'
- Time
- Ali's
story
jumps
back to
1933
- Time manipulated
- When Amir talks about his and
Hassan's childhood, it goes into
detail and uses a lot of imagery
- '...my entire
childhood
seems like one
long lazy
summer day
with Hassan'
- Prior to this,
there's a
juxtaposing
argument. Shows
unreliable voice
- '....playing hide and seek,
cops and robbers..'
- Someone is always
superior in these
games - may represent
social standing of Amir
and Hassan
- When Amir wants
Baba to read his story
- 'Air grew heavy, damp,
almost solid. I was
breathing bricks.'
- Structure
- Time is used to
manipulate
structure - jumps
back and forth
- Ends with a cliffhanger
- 'Then
Afghanistan
changed
forever.'
- Foreshadowing and
cliffhanger - this structure
creates suspense
- Voice
- Amir
- Childish Voice
- 'John Wayne didn't
really speak Farsi and
he wasn't Iranian!'
- Adult Voice
- '...to this day, it was
one of the longest
minutes of my life.'
- Unreliable
Narrator
- Constant change of
emotions towards
Hassan
- 'What
does he
know, that
illiterate
Hazara?'
- '"You're a prince
Hassan...and I love
you."'
- Constant
change of
emotions
towards
Baba
- 'Most days I
worship Baba...
But right then, I
wished I
could...drain all his
cursed blood from
my body.'
- Hassan
- 'Amir Agha'
- Always
polite, inferior
to Amir
- '"Someday, Inshallah,
you will be a great
writer..."'
- Foreshadowing
and supportive
voice
- Rahim Khan
- Supportive Voice
throughout
- 'My door is and always will
be important to you, Amir
jan... Bravo.'
- 'As always, it was
Rahim Khan who
resuced me.'
- Setting
- '...musty-smelling bazaars of
the Shar-e-Nau... walked amid
the bustling crowds...'
- Vivid Imagery
- Makes us feel as if
we are there in their
childhood
- Emphasises
importance of their
childhood
- 'Old Abandoned Cemetery...'
- Foreshadows death and loss
- There, there is a
'pomegranate tree'
with 'blood-red
pomegranates..'
- Symoblism
- Representative of their
friendship.
Foreshadowing the fact it
may be tarnished in the
future