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Analysis Of Khaled Hosseini 's ' The Mountains Echoed '

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Khaled Hosseini in his novel And the Mountains Echoed shows that male authors can fight for the rights of women through their work, and create a feminist fiction. And the Mountains Echoed is a successful feminist fiction because it displays some unique female characters such as Nila Wahdati, which voices out feminism and how women are oppressed in the Afghan society. Nila Wahdati is gifted, stylish, condemned French-Afghan housewife who writes impassioned poetry about love, sex, desire, and loss in 1950s Kabul. I chose Nila because I think she is misinterpreted by many readers including myself. The first time I read the chapter focusing on Nila’s history I was not impressed by her, and although she does still does not make a good impression, she is a great example of the affluent women from Kabul during the 1950s. Furthermore, she is integral to the story, the infertile woman who buys Pari from Saboor thereby serving as the catalyst for the novel’s events. Nila’s feminism is best exemplified in her outspoken nature, and her blatant defiance of the patriarchy. To be considered a feminist fiction, a story must revolve around a patriarchal society. A patriarchal society is a society where men are considered more powerful and dominant compared to women, and women are considered as men’s property, or subordinates. Set in the 1950s the society is already male oriented, but the idea that a female is property of a man is exemplified in the second chapter of the novel, when Saboor

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