48 pages 1 hour read

Amy Waldman

The Submission

Fiction | Novel | Adult | Published in 2011

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Themes

What Makes an American?

The Submission is a work of historical fiction in that it takes place two years after 9/11 in the context of creating a memorial. The overarching theme of this book is the question, “What is an American?” The search for the answer comes not from the protagonist, however. Mo is firm in the knowledge that he is American. Mo is a second-generation immigrant who has grown up knowing nothing but America. His closest contact with Islam is through his Muslim Indian parents, and the only rite he observes is Ramadan. He rejects any attempt to characterize him as wholly Muslim, extremist or not. This is best demonstrated when he pastes his own picture over the Post article that reveals the memorial designer’s background is Muslim, and in the process tries to characterize Mo as someone he is not.

Rather, the book endeavors to answer this question through the other characters’ narrative arcs. Mo’s Islamic heritage is constantly questioned or thrown in his face. When asked about his beliefs, where he’s traveled, what his Garden design means, he resorts to one of two strategies. In the first, seen in the public hearing over the memorial design, he explains his intent in terms of architectural history or elemental design.