Themes In Wuthering Heights And A Thousand Splendid Suns 【Trending】
Both novels serve as searing indictments of the social structures that constrain individual agency. Brontë focuses on the rigid class hierarchy of 19th-century England, while Hosseini examines the suffocating patriarchy and political tyranny of late 20th-century Afghanistan.
Wives of Shame. In A Thousand Splendid Suns , the hierarchy is gendered. In Afghanistan under the Taliban, women are legally erased. They cannot work, study, or leave home without a male guardian. Mariam and Laila are property. The novel’s great thematic argument is that patriarchy is a form of domestic warfare. Mariam, an illegitimate woman, occupies the lowest rung; Laila, educated and beautiful, initially has more value. But war strips both to their essential humanity. Hosseini shows that the ultimate act of resistance is for women to love each other across those artificial class and age divides. themes in wuthering heights and a thousand splendid suns
Heathcliff is marginalized because of his unknown origins and lack of wealth, while Catherine is forced to choose between her soulmate and the "civilized" life offered by Edgar Linton. The moors represent a wild freedom that the Victorian social code seeks to suppress. Both novels serve as searing indictments of the