The article analyses Mohsin Hamid's debut novel Moth Smoke(2000) about an interclass friendship challenged above all by economic differences which lead to its dramatic disintegration. The novel’s central story is read as a small-scale representation of Pakistan’s problem of vast class inequality exacerbated by rapid globalisation
These This article discusses two of Khaled Hosseini’s notable novels, namely The Kite Runner (2003) ...
The article examines Mohsin Hamid’s third novel, How to Get Filthy Rich in Rising Asia (2013), by fo...
It is appropriately designated man as a social animal. For this reason, there a compulsion before hu...
The paper accentuates the trajectory of conflict, corruption and disruption in a torn nation through...
The socio-economic issues in capitalist societies due to class difference is a very dangerous dilemm...
Mohsin Hamid is an exponent of postcolonial characterization and possesses a specific touch of today...
This article addresses Mohsin Hamid’s How to Get Filthy Rich in Rising Asia (2013). The narrative, w...
The events in the novel Moth smoke, by Mohsin Hamid are based in Lahore, Pakistan. The writer takes ...
This is a study of Khushwant Singh’s novel Train to Pakistan which is seen as the reflection o...
Given the profusion of negative terminology ascribed to non-Western migrants generally, coupled with...
With the rise of globalization, people and cultures are interconnected economically, culturally, and...
This article explores ‘social relevance’ of Mohsin Hamid’s Moth Smoke (2000), Kamila Shamsie’s Salt ...
Class stratification and psychological ailments are the most inquisitive social factors which are ca...
This article offers a comparative reading of the novel and film adaptation of The Reluctant Fundamen...
In Exit West, Mohsin Hamid fictionally reimagines and universalises migrant/refugee experience by pr...
These This article discusses two of Khaled Hosseini’s notable novels, namely The Kite Runner (2003) ...
The article examines Mohsin Hamid’s third novel, How to Get Filthy Rich in Rising Asia (2013), by fo...
It is appropriately designated man as a social animal. For this reason, there a compulsion before hu...
The paper accentuates the trajectory of conflict, corruption and disruption in a torn nation through...
The socio-economic issues in capitalist societies due to class difference is a very dangerous dilemm...
Mohsin Hamid is an exponent of postcolonial characterization and possesses a specific touch of today...
This article addresses Mohsin Hamid’s How to Get Filthy Rich in Rising Asia (2013). The narrative, w...
The events in the novel Moth smoke, by Mohsin Hamid are based in Lahore, Pakistan. The writer takes ...
This is a study of Khushwant Singh’s novel Train to Pakistan which is seen as the reflection o...
Given the profusion of negative terminology ascribed to non-Western migrants generally, coupled with...
With the rise of globalization, people and cultures are interconnected economically, culturally, and...
This article explores ‘social relevance’ of Mohsin Hamid’s Moth Smoke (2000), Kamila Shamsie’s Salt ...
Class stratification and psychological ailments are the most inquisitive social factors which are ca...
This article offers a comparative reading of the novel and film adaptation of The Reluctant Fundamen...
In Exit West, Mohsin Hamid fictionally reimagines and universalises migrant/refugee experience by pr...
These This article discusses two of Khaled Hosseini’s notable novels, namely The Kite Runner (2003) ...
The article examines Mohsin Hamid’s third novel, How to Get Filthy Rich in Rising Asia (2013), by fo...
It is appropriately designated man as a social animal. For this reason, there a compulsion before hu...