Character Development -- the Yugoslavian Bodybuilder
Prologue
Kristoff Savi-ic is a first-generation Yugoslavian-American (of Serbian descent) whose parents immigrated with their three children to the United States in the 1990, having narrowly escaped the Balkan Wars that ensued immediately afterwards in the early 1990s. At 29, he is the youngest of three much older brothers and he bore the brunt of considerably intense and somewhat cruel teasing on their part as a child and as a teenager. His brothers were both jealous and resentful of the comparatively easy life that Kristoff enjoyed growing up in the U.S., both of them having experienced much more difficult childhoods in Yugoslavia and without any of the comforts and opportunities that were always available to Kristoff, who moved to the U.S. when he was 7. Partly because of his love of American junk food as a child, Kristoff became somewhat overweight as a child and his brothers, both of whom had military experience, tormented him about his weight. They also routinely showed off their manliness, mainly through their boxing and they taught Kristoff just about everything he knows about what kinds of traits and behaviors are admirable in men, including an extremely chauvinistic, mistrusting, and predatory sexual attitude toward relationships with women.
Kristoff was never a particularly good student but his parents always made excuses for him having to do with the fact that he had to overcome a language barrier. One of the predominant themes in the Savi-ic household has always been the relative ignorance of Americans in comparison to Serbians, and Europeans in general, especially in relation to their ignorance of world history and culture. No matter how poorly Kristoff performed in school, his parents always reinforced the family narrative that he (and all of the Savi-ics) are much smarter than Americans. Pavel ("Paul") Savi-ic, Kristoff's father, was studying to become a mechanical engineer before leaving...
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