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  1. My Son the Fanatic. Parvez, a first-generation Punjabi Pakistani immigrant to England, notices that his college-student son Ali has begun throwing away his possessions and withdrawing from his friends. Parvez’s friends—who, like Parvez, are Punjabi and work as taxi drivers—believe that Ali’s strange behaviors can be explained by drug ...

  2. Genre: Fiction, Family Drama. Setting: London, England. Climax: Parvez and Ali argue about Ali’s newfound love of radical Islam and his disdain for England and the West. Antagonist: Through most of the story, it appears that Parvez is the protagonist and Ali the antagonist.

  3. Jul 11, 2022 · The widening of the gulf between Parvez and Farid constitutes the central action of My Son the Fanatic, but Kureishi counterposes that narrative with another story in which Parvez actually grows closer to a person with whom, on the surface, he has little in common.

  4. Analysis. Parvez, a Pakistani immigrant in England, begins to secretly visit his son’s room because he has noticed changes in it. At first the changes in Ali ’s room are welcome. The room, once messy, is now clean and orderly.

    • The Suspicious Father
    • Soliciting Advice
    • A Watchful Father
    • A Father's Confrontation
    • The Final Fallout

    Parvez begins to suspect that something is wrong with Ali. Ali's interests have changed, his friends and girlfriend have disappeared, and his precious belongings have been thrown or given away. Ail used to be a typical, messy teenager, but now his room is neat and tidy, and the wall is devoid of the usual posters that would indicate a typical young...

    Parvez knows that he needs help and advice from someone to guide him through this tangled mess. He is afraid to bring up the issue with his fellow cabbies for fear that they might judge him an unfit father. The fellow cabbies are mostly also Punjabis or people of the Punjab region of Pakistan or India. Parvez feels ashamed to admit that his son mig...

    Parvez begins his detective work immediately. He takes long glances during dinners and touches Ali's hands at other times to check for a temperature. He watches him eat to make sure that his appetite is normal and sound. When Ali leaves for the day, Parvez checks his room thoroughly for pills, needles, and powders. Each night he reports back to Bet...

    Parvez follows through with his plan and tells the story to Bettina the next morning. Parvez takes Ali to a cafe to have dinner and talk despite Ali's initial resistance to go. When they sit down, Parvez orders a bourbon, and Ali has water. Ali immediately criticizes Parvez for his alcohol consumption, telling him it is simply wrong to consume alco...

    Parvez wants to kick Ali out of his house, but Bettina persuades Parvez to give his son another chance. She convinces him by explaining that Ali is young and young people can get sucked into cults and groups and that they can get themselves out and change their views. Parvez tries again to relate to Ali by explaining how life is for living and not ...

  5. “My Son the Fanatic” is a short story by Hanif Kureishi. The story deals with a father-son relationship and has anticipated discussions of Islamic fundamentalists recruited from apparently...

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  7. Parvez's character in "My Son the Fanatic" is portrayed as a hardworking immigrant father who values Western ideals and is bewildered by his son's turn to religious...

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