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This article examines the concept of silence and aggression in Mohsin Hamid’s Moth Smoke and his The Reluctant Fundamentalist in relation to Noelle Neumann’s theory of spiral of silence. Various ideological, socio-economic, and psychological divisive forces at work in a coercive society trigger the downward spiral movement of silence. The article also discusses Hamid’s concept of fear and silence in the light of his news article titled “Fear and Silence.” His article explores how the coercive structures of fear and silence work in such a society to build a pressure on and around individuals and eventually silence their deviant voices. Consequently, the pressure people feel to conceal their views when they believe they are in minority creates a climate of fear and prejudice that eventually triggers aggression. Feelings of fear and consequent silence also evoke a diseased psychological behavior in the intellectuals, who in the absence of a just outlet for their creative energies turn to intoxication and crime. Furthermore, the article explores the criminal psyche of the characters in the light of John Dollard’s frustration aggression theory as an outcome of such silence. The hierarchy of suppression and division becomes more intensified in the modern oppressive societies where initiative and self-confidence are paralyzed by fear and silence.

Salma Khatoon, Nosheen Fatima. (2019) Spiral of Fear and Silence in Mohsin Hamid’s Moth Smoke and The Reluctant Fundamentalist, Journal of Research ( Humanities), Vol LV, Issue 1.
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