Narrativization of Gender Trauma in Khaled Hosseini's A Thousand Splendid SunsandSiba Shakib’s Afghanistan, Where God Only Comes to Weep
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Abstract
This dissertation analyzes the portrayal of marginalized female characters in
SibaShakib’s novel Afghanistan, Where God Only Comes to Weep and Khaled Hosseini's
novel A Thousand Splendid Suns respectively. It investigates into the socio-political
challenges faced by the female characters Mariam, Laila, and Shiorin-Gol. This dissertation
argues that the novels narrativize the gender-induced trauma due to patriarchy, religious
orthodoxy, and neo-colonial ideologies. Furthermore, this study explains how female
protagonists navigate and resist cultural hegemonic power amid traumatic circumstances and
why they are compelled to flee their homeland due to oppressive ideologies. The dissertation
uses the theoretical and conceptual framework of Ruth Leys proposed on Traumaas well as
Frantz Fanon's notion of internalized oppression. Moreover, it has utilized Kali Tal's notion
of sexual abuse of women to addresses an individual experience of collective Trauma as well
as UrvasiButalia’s concept on politics of silencing women’s pain, and Ritu Menon and Kamla
Bashin’s argument on women as the equilibrium of honor that constructs trauma. Besides, it
borrows Stef Crap’s idea of postcolonial trauma and Lucy Bond’s notion of
multidimensionality which discuss psychological, cultural, and socio-historical dimension of
trauma. This dissertation employs interpretative strategies to analyze working through of
trauma of the major characters, and the theory of gender trauma.
Keywords: trauma, gender trauma, resilience, internalized oppression, patriarchy, religion
and neo-colonialism, triple-marginalization of women
