The Kite Runner And a Thousand Splendid Suns

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A Thousand Splendid Suns & The Kite Runner By Khaled Hosseini Aristotle, a Greek philosopher and a student of Plato, once said that “women are defective by nature” because they are unable to reproduce semen which contains a full human being. Misogyny has been part of our society since the early times of Alexander the Great and keeps influencing a lot of philosophers and writers up to our present days like Khaled Hosseini. Hosseini’s most famous books are The Kite Runner and A Thousand Splendid Suns, both including the theme of misogyny in Afghanistan. Those books expose the shocking truth about the status of Afghan women. In our present society, women are treated very differently than the women in the books, however one could argue that misogyny is still a part of our modernized world. Is misogyny truly a hidden aspect of our society today? Even though it does not manifest in the same way as it does in Afghanistan, misogyny still exists around us without our knowledge. By comparing the role of women in the society, their objectification and the degradation of their humanity in the books to our modern society, it will be proven that misogyny is indeed an aspect of our daily lives. In both the books, the role of the Afghan women is plain and clear. They are expected to be good housewives, to obey their husbands and bear children. In The Kite Runner, Khala Jamila, Amir’s mother in law, was forced to quit her promising singing career to marry the general. After their marriage, she knew better than to disobey her husband and never negotiated with his decisions: “Soraya told me that her mother had wanted to sing at our wedding, only one song, but the general gave her one of his looks and the matter was buried.” Khala Jamila was raised to accept her destiny as an obeying housewife, the only destiny reserved for Afghan women. Her biggest fear was that her
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