Marie Aruna, M. Sakkthi Shalini
Memory
studies as an interdisciplinary approach uses memory as a tool for remembering
the traumatic experiences. Khaled Hosseini’s text A Thousand Splendid Suns (2007) narrates the events of the past by
combining history, culture and politics in the South Asian context and it also
explains about the gender and religion in particular the lives of women under
Islamic regime. The novel is set in the historical era of Afghanistan during
soviet invasion and until the Taliban occupation. The theme revolves around the
struggles and challenges of the people at times of war and invasion. Through
the protagonists’ Mariam and Lalia’s struggle against the patriarchal clutches,
Khaled Hosseini symbolizes Afghan people’s desire for independence. Mariam and
Lalia undergo cultural trauma, the former traumatizes due to the internal
displacement and by the vigorous imposition of religious practices, and the
latter suffers from trauma through the forceful external migration and also by
the memories of homeland. Khaled Hosseini as a diaspora writer describes the
ancient history and cultural practices of Afghanistan. This shows his
individual and cultural memory towards his native land. The
research argument takes into account the intersection of trauma and memory in
the interpretation of the literary text as it represents the interrelated and
complimentary fields of study since 1990s. Trauma is considered as the act of remembering,
thus this paper tends to highlight the traumatic histories embedded in the
culture of oppression.
history, culture,
religious practices, trauma and memory.
VOL.14, ISSUE No.2, June 2022