Cultural Symbolism In The Kite Runner

348 Words2 Pages
was wealthy and respected. In California, he earns low wages working at a gas station. Amir makes a particularly ironic comment, remarking that some of the homes he sees make Baba’s house in Kabul look like a servant’s hut. In the past, Ali and Hassan were the servants, and Baba was the master. Now Baba is more like a servant himself. These differences leave Baba perpetually frustrated. In small ways, he continues trying to reclaim his life in Kabul, like when he buys everyone drinks the night of Amir’s graduation.
Mousumi Paul maintains that Amir after having reached to America “evolves over the course of the novel” in an attempt to assimilate in “newly-adopted” culture to rediscover his identity and “the modern West American and Traditional