Khaled Hosseini’s uses imagery and
diction to communicate how war can drastically change the lives of Afghans
living in Afghanistan. In The Kite Runner,
Amir is not only the main character,
but he is also a character that experiences both what life was like before and
after the Taliban regime. Amir is lucky in that he didn’t have to spend his
childhood under the Taliban and is able to escape with Baba at the very
beginning of the conflict; however, over twenty years later when Amir returns
to Kabul to save Hassan’s son Sohrab, Hosseini uses imagery to convey the
effects of war on Kabul. “When Kabul finally did unroll before us, I was
certain, absolutely certain, that he had taken a wrong turn somewhere…Rubble
and beggars. Everywhere I looked, that was what I saw” (244-245). The imagery
here not only conveys Amir’s reaction, but also demonstrates how severely Kabul
has change. A lot can happen in twenty years, but for one to no longer recognize
their hometown really demonstrates how much war has change Afghanistan and the
lives of the people. In addition, Hosseini not only uses diction to enhance his
imagery, but also uses it to communicate the poverty and hardships of Afghans as
a result of war. The war completely destroy Afghanistan and turn a once
peaceful nation into a place full of “rubble and beggars,” and to make matters
worse, the beggars are little children and their mothers. “They squatted at every street corner, dressed in
shredded burlap rags, mud-caked hands held out for a coin. And the beggars were
mostly children now, thin and grim-faced, some no older than five or six.
They sat in the laps of their burlap-clad mothers alongside gutters at busy
street corners and chanted “Bakhshesh, bakhshesh!’” (245). Words such as “shredded”,
“mud-caked”, “thin and grim” all depict the dire situation of Afghans. Physically
their burlaps are shredded, but also metaphorically, the nation and the lives
of these people are all shredded. Life in Kabul is no longer what it used to be.
Words such as “mud-caked, thin and grim” describe the children; but also indirectly
describe Kabul. One of the first things Amir notices when he reaches Kabul is
rubble. Thus, to use words such as “mud-caked” and “thin and grim” add to rubble
in portraying how broken and torn down Afghanistan has become as a result of
war. Hence, Hosseini uses imagery and diction to communicate the effects war
has on a nation and its people.
I like your conclusion paragraph because you talked about the effect of war in Afghanistan. I really liked how you mention what Amir saw before and after of Kabul because Hossenni uses strong imagery there.
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