Article Details
  • Published Online:
    March  2025
  • Product Name:
    The IUP Journal of English Studies
  • Product Type:
    Article
  • Product Code:
    IJES110325
  • DOI:
    10.71329/IUPJES/2025.20.1.129-142
  • Author Name:
    Gunja Patni and Rimika Singhvi
  • Availability:
    YES
  • Subject/Domain:
    Arts and Humanities
  • Download Format:
    PDF
  • Pages:
    129-142
Volume 20, Issue 1, March 2025
Exploring the South Asian Experience of Migration, Adaptation and Memory in Khaled Hosseini’s The Kite Runner and Mohsin Hamid’s The Reluctant Fundamentalist
Abstract

The figure of the diaspora writer in today’s globalized world symbolizes both the local and the global, acting as a cultural traveler capable of crossing national, political, ethnic, and technological boundaries. This paper studies Khaled Hosseini’s The Kite Runner (2003) and Mohsin Hamid’s The Reluctant Fundamentalist (2007) to examine how they problematize the encounters between essentialized and constructed notions of migrant identity, and between representation and interpretation, in light of their own diasporic journeys and consequent adaptations. By doing so, the paper explores the instability of both the representing and represented subjects, as well as the vitality of lived experiences, through the novelists’ prose style, narrative voice, autobiographical elements, tropes and metaphors, and experiments with form. Thus, this paper aims to place the individual works of these writers within a diverse tradition of immigrant writing, while also situating their work within a cultural, historical, and aesthetic framework rooted in long-established indigenous traditions and acts of memory.

Introduction

It is interesting to note the recent growth of the South Asian region, especially Afghanistan and Pakistan, who share in the lived realities of occupation and interference with their postcolonial, post-modern, transnational and consumerism-led history, alongside the political and diplomatic equation with the Western superpowers.