Kuba,
I found your post about how vehicles are connected to power in both The Kite Runner and in issues today to be very interesting and insightful. When I was reading The Kite Runner, I didn’t pay much attention to any possible symbolism the cars could have. I agree with you in that cars can show wealth, power, and political status, but going a little deeper as to interpret that cars can show culture. I think you were starting to get to that idea, but I’ll expand a bit.
An example in the book that I found of this point was on page 136, “My face pressed against the fence, I’d try to count the blinking red taillights inching along, stretching as far as my eyes could see. BMWs. Saabs. Porsches. Cars I’d never seen in Kabul, where most people drove Russian Volgas, old Opels, or Iranian Paikans.” The many different types of internationally made cars found in America shows how connected we are in the world (specifically imports). We also are a large cultural melting pot. Especially in California, many immigrants came into the U.S. and more are still coming in. Our diverse and broad collection of cars is similar to our population.
Afghanistan at this time was a more internal society. I got the sense that many people never left their immediate area of surrounding towns or even own villages because there was no real need to. The few European cars found reflects the attitude of how people drive their cars because they need a car. Not because they want to show off their wealth in purchasing the newest model.
Your original point of vehicles being symbolic in The Kite Runner expanded to real world applications that can show a lot of insight to other cultures.
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Jordan,
Your post connecting post-modernism and Stephen Colbert’s testimony before Congress expressed many points that I found myself agreeing with. I’ve also heard about how Stephen Colbert testified on the migratory workers getting agricultural jobs, people getting upset about how they were taking jobs, the jobs opening up to anyone, and almost no Americans actually taking the jobs. Colbert’s famous status certainly did catch the media’s attention to this subject. By the entertainer and newscaster taking on the post-modernistic multiple roles by taking his more entertaining news and viewpoints to a serious congressional meeting.
Colbert’s multiple post-modern roles were for the positive towards his points on the agricultural jobs, but could be seen as negative towards the seriousness of politics. Much like the news, will politics become synonymous with entertainment? Will stations like C-SPAN be watched by many more people and even for fun? Less serious and fact-concentrated news is bad enough, politics like that could become catastrophic. The way our country is run should be decided in serious, uniform processes. It’s just too risky for successful control of our own country and our reputation as seen by others.
Your original connection showed the possible positives and negatives of a post-modern society.