Search engine for discovering works of Art, research articles, and books related to Art and Culture
ShareThis
Javascript must be enabled to continue!

Fluid identities and transnational belonging in Khaled Hosseini’s The Kite Runner

View through CrossRef
Khaled Hosseini’s The Kite Runner (2003) illustrates how war, displacement, and exile contribute to the formation of transnational identities. The novel also captures the profound anguish experienced by migrants. As an Afghan-American, Hosseini narrates his personal understanding of Afghanistan’s political, social, and religious turmoil, vividly portraying these realities in this novel. This research will examine the formation of transnational identity and the challenges inherent in the migration process by focusing on the fractured lives of Afghan migrants, who are compelled to navigate shifting cultural, political, and emotional landscapes. It will draw on the theories of diaspora (Stuart Hall), and imaginary homelands (Salman Rushdie) to demonstrate how Hosseini portrays identity as both rooted in a shared past and continually reconstructed through experiences of dislocation and diaspora. Hosseini has not represented migration simply as a physical crossing of border but also a psychological rupture that produces nostalgia and the struggle for belonging.
Title: Fluid identities and transnational belonging in Khaled Hosseini’s The Kite Runner
Description:
Khaled Hosseini’s The Kite Runner (2003) illustrates how war, displacement, and exile contribute to the formation of transnational identities.
The novel also captures the profound anguish experienced by migrants.
As an Afghan-American, Hosseini narrates his personal understanding of Afghanistan’s political, social, and religious turmoil, vividly portraying these realities in this novel.
This research will examine the formation of transnational identity and the challenges inherent in the migration process by focusing on the fractured lives of Afghan migrants, who are compelled to navigate shifting cultural, political, and emotional landscapes.
It will draw on the theories of diaspora (Stuart Hall), and imaginary homelands (Salman Rushdie) to demonstrate how Hosseini portrays identity as both rooted in a shared past and continually reconstructed through experiences of dislocation and diaspora.
Hosseini has not represented migration simply as a physical crossing of border but also a psychological rupture that produces nostalgia and the struggle for belonging.

Related Results

The Purpose and the Ideology of Colonization: A Study of the Otherness in The Kite Runner
The Purpose and the Ideology of Colonization: A Study of the Otherness in The Kite Runner
The Kite Runner is considered being the first novel by Afghan-American writer Khalid Hosseini which is published in 2003. The novel discusses the story of Amir, a young Afghan boy ...
Transnational Chinese Cinemas
Transnational Chinese Cinemas
The term “transnational Chinese cinemas” first appeared in 1997 in the anthology Transnational Chinese Cinemas: Identity, Nationhood, Gender. It was coined, theorized, and introduc...
Racial Segregation in Khaled Hosseini’s The Kite Runner and JM Coetzee’s Disgrace
Racial Segregation in Khaled Hosseini’s The Kite Runner and JM Coetzee’s Disgrace
This paper makes a comparative analysis of racial discrimination faced by the characters in the novels, The Kite Runner and Disgrace. Both novels are based on non-western settings ...
Experimental and numerical analysis of blade channel vortices in a Francis turbine runner
Experimental and numerical analysis of blade channel vortices in a Francis turbine runner
PurposeThe purpose of this paper is to investigate, experimentally and numerically, the pressure pulse characteristics and unsteady flow behavior in a Francis turbine runner for mo...
Kites and String as Metaphors for Control and Freedom in The Kite Runner
Kites and String as Metaphors for Control and Freedom in The Kite Runner
The objective of this study is to identify kites and strings as metaphors in Khaled Hosseini’s The Kite Runner (2003) to the effect of characterising how the concepts of control an...
Language And Identity In Postcolonial Diaspora: A Study Of Linguistic Hybridity In Khaled Hosseini And Chinua Achebe’S Works
Language And Identity In Postcolonial Diaspora: A Study Of Linguistic Hybridity In Khaled Hosseini And Chinua Achebe’S Works
Linguistic hybridity is a key concept in postcolonial literature and it can be used to resist as well as adapt among diasporic people. This paper discusses the use of linguistic hy...
Corporate heritage identities, corporate heritage brands and the multiple heritage identities of the British Monarchy
Corporate heritage identities, corporate heritage brands and the multiple heritage identities of the British Monarchy
PurposeThis article scrutinises the nature and salience of corporate heritage identities via the lens of the British Monarchy. A corporate heritage identity framework is introduced...
Fragments of Displacement: Diaspora and Identity in Chinua Achebe and Khaled Hosseini’s Works
Fragments of Displacement: Diaspora and Identity in Chinua Achebe and Khaled Hosseini’s Works
This paper aims at comparing the portrayal of diaspora in selected novels by Chinua Achebe and Khaled Hosseini, two great writers of different origin. Analysing the works of Achebe...

Back to Top