The Reluctant Fundamentalist
The Reluctant Fundamentalist
The Reluctant Fundamentalist
When Written: 2001-2006
When Published: 2007
Literary Period: Post-modernism
Genre: Bildungsroman
Love
The theme of love is quite special in the story. It doesn’t play the most
important role although it helps to investigate the protagonist’s
individuality deeper. Changez, the main character, goes on vacation with
his Princeton friends to Greece, where he meets Erica, “an aspiring
author.” He falls in love with her, but there is an issue – Erica is still in
love with her childhood boyfriend Chris, who died from lung cancer.
She can't forget about him and it stops her from having sex with
Changez. When he convinces Erica to imagine him as Chris, they do
have sex. However, it spoils their relationship as well. Erica becomes
mentally ill and she begins treatment in a mental institution, from which
she escapes soon. We don’t know exactly whether Erica really loves
Chagnez and his real feelings are also unclear, because the narrator
doesn’t emphasize this. However, it may be called love in some way.
The Stranger
Changez’s conversation with the Stranger serves as a framing device for
his story of living in America and becoming the main he is today. The
Stranger is unnamed and never speaks, so it is left to the reader to judge
whether he can be trusted. Thus, each reader must decide whether the
Stranger is a simple tourist, an American spy sent to apprehend or kill
Changez, or something even more sinister.
Erica
Changez’s girlfriend during his time in the States, Erica herself is
representative of his tumultuous relationship with America. She is
beautiful, popular, and smart. Though she loves Changez, her inability to
move on from her previous boyfriend Chris (who died a year before she
and Changez met) puts a heavy strain on their relationship. After 9/11,
she falls victim to depression and obsession, and it is unclear whether or
not she later took her own life. Changez clearly still holds affection for
her memory, and sometimes imagines that she might seek him out,
though he knows this is likely impossible.
Jim
Jim is the Executive VP at the financial firm Underwood Samson, and
serves as a mentor to Changez for much of his time at the firm. His is a
classic rags-to-riches story, and he identifies with Changez because of
their similar financial backgrounds. Unfortunately, Jim’s view of
Changez is colored by his inability to truly comprehend Changez’s
culture and racial background, much as Erica's view is colored.
Wainwright
Wainwright is Changez' only friend at Underwood Samson and the only
other colored person in his class.
Juan-Bautista
The old CEO of a publishing company in Valparaiso, he advises
Changez to not just be a mercenary for the Americans.
"But bats have survived here. They are successful urban dwellers,
like you and I, swift enough to escape detection and canny enough to
hunt among a crowd."
Changez tells his American interlocutor an allegory of different animals
and how they have or have not adapted to the man-made environment of
the city. For someone like Changez who did not come from a Western
metropolis, living in New York was a difficult experience of finding his
way practically and morally in a world that isolated him while providing
him with many more opportunities.
DATED 10\10\2022.