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Form, Structure and Language in chapter 1 of The Kite Runner

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This explores how form, structure and language is used in The Kite Runner

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Page 1: Form, Structure and Language in chapter 1 of The Kite Runner
Page 2: Form, Structure and Language in chapter 1 of The Kite Runner

Form Structure

Language

Narrative

Structure

Point of View

Page 3: Form, Structure and Language in chapter 1 of The Kite Runner

FORMBildungsroman NovelAKA ‘coming of age’ novel.

Page 4: Form, Structure and Language in chapter 1 of The Kite Runner
Page 5: Form, Structure and Language in chapter 1 of The Kite Runner

Bildungsroman tell limited, uneventful stories in which weak but flexible heroes reach their maturity.

Page 6: Form, Structure and Language in chapter 1 of The Kite Runner

EVIDENCEWillow Tree-symbolises new beginnings and redemption.

Willow Tree-symbolises new beginnings and redemption.

First Person Intradiegetic narrator

Willow Tree-symbolises new beginnings and redemption. Willow Tree-symbolises new beginnings and redemption.

Willow Tree-symbolises new beginnings and redemption.

Rahim Khan: There is a way to be good again.

Metaphor: The past claws it’s way out.Everyday meaningful events: Then I saw a pair of kites

Retrospective: I became what I am today at the age of 12.

Page 7: Form, Structure and Language in chapter 1 of The Kite Runner

STRUCTURE: USE OF SYMBOLS

Kites- “I looked up at those twin

kites”Language:“For you a thousand

times over”

Harelip- “Hassan

the harelipped

Kite Runner”.

Does Amir still see

Hassan as inferior?

Redemption/Death: Willow

Tree.

Weather.

Foreshadowing and analepsis

Page 8: Form, Structure and Language in chapter 1 of The Kite Runner

LANGUAGE1. Anthropomorphism: Because the past claws it’s

way out.2. Metaphor: I have been peeking into that deserted

alley for the past 26 years.3. Use of simple sentences: “Because the past claws

it’s way out… One day last summer my friend Rahim Khan called from Pakistan…It was my past of unatoned sins.

4. Minor Sentences: “Ali. Kabul.”5. Simile: “Like a pair of eyes looking down on San

Francisco the place I now called home.”6. Repetition of “thought”.7. Connotations of frigid.8. Semantic Field of the park-associations with the

park (setting).

Page 9: Form, Structure and Language in chapter 1 of The Kite Runner

Narrative Structure

Loosely Circular

Retrospective

Begins with a crisis

Hints at climax and catharsis

Use of setting

Episodic?

Page 10: Form, Structure and Language in chapter 1 of The Kite Runner

• I realize I have been peeking into that deserted alley…

• Hasan• His

Conscience• Soraya• His father

• There is a way to be good again

• Unreliable?• Pathetic

Fallacy.• Adult

First Person

Rahim Khan

Bildungsroman Novel

Who is Amir

addressing

Page 11: Form, Structure and Language in chapter 1 of The Kite Runner

IS AMIR MANIPULATING THE READER?It is this honesty from Amir right from

the start that allows real emotional connection with the reader which keeps them interested-narrative voice/characterisation.

When he talks about remembering ‘the precise moment’ the foreshadowing makes the reader want to continue to find out the event that is the catalyst for the novel-narrative voice.

Page 12: Form, Structure and Language in chapter 1 of The Kite Runner

OTHER CONSIDERATIONSSettings: The Kite Runner is about

Afghanistan but is opens in San Francisco.Shifts in Time-links to chapter 2. Amir

begins narrating his childhood. Is Chapter 1 the exposition?Characterisation of Rahim Khan: He is the

catalyst to make Amir proactive. Suggests he is wise.

Characterisation of Amir: Rich, educated and reflective.

Hasan-precious and vulnerable. Amir as villain/anti-hero

Page 13: Form, Structure and Language in chapter 1 of The Kite Runner