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Major Pettigrew's Last Stand
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Question #4: Setting
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Lauren
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Sep 30, 2011 11:25PM

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The one thing that comes to mind is Mrs. Ali's Muslim background. Not sure how that same set of circumstances would have unfolded in another part of the world. Her family had their own issues. The Son, grandson, etc. Her love and loyalty to them seemed to evolve too. The Major had a lot of respect for the young man, (Abdul) that worked for him, and Mrs. Ali was very grateful for their friendship/working relationship.
The setting symbolized the "simple life" (but showed that lots 'o drama can occur in farm country, too). I think the smaller the town, the smaller the circles of people (as someone who moved from DC to a town of 4,500 people, I think this is a "duh"), and that's what provides the settingg's charm as well as the irritating fact that everybody sees everything. And has an opinion about it.

I agree, Alisha. Pettigrew is entirely tied to his setting, and he would have been a completely different character apart from it. Pettigrew is very much like the country---old, pretty unchanging, authentic.