¶ … Kazuo Ishiguro's novel Never Let Me Go tells the story of three young people in a dystopian version of the near future. Kathy, Ruth, and Tommy are not traditional beings; they are clones who were scientifically created for the sole purpose of organ donation. They will each give up their organs until they "complete," which is the euphemistic term used in the novel for the death of the clones. Each of these three characters must, in turn, come to terms with their eventual fate. Ruth, Kathy, and Tommy will all complete once their organs have been harvested and given to acceptable human beings. As children the three attend a boarding school called Hailsham wherein the students are taught nothing in the way of life skills or academic lessons which would lead them to fully functional adulthood. Instead they spend all of their time making art and poetry and engaging in sexual experimentation with their classmates. Although these three characters are the main portion of the book, they are not individual in any particular way. They are emblematic of the three variations for existence that all the clones in this society have. Ruth is the angry one who demands companionship while she wastes away her short existence. Tommy is the rebellious one determined to find a way of staying alive. Kathy is the accepting one who realizes that there is only completion waiting for all of them. In opposition to these clones are the few human characters in the novel who are teachers at the boarding school. There is Miss Emily, who detests the clones, and Miss Lucy who is more sympathetic. The latter is potentially the most interesting character in the novel because she has feeling for the plights of the clones, even to the point of informing them of their purpose. Unlike most of the people the clones interact with, she does all she can to help them even though she realizes that this is ultimately futile. When the reader first encounters Miss...
Her description is nothing spectacular. She is described as a plain looking woman; "bulldoggy" is the term that Kathy, the narrator, uses (Ishiguro 26). Even though Miss Lucy is stout and rather hard-seeming, she is athletically inclined and will play with the children in sporting games. She willingly communicates and interacts with the students at the school. From Kathy's early description, it seems that Miss Lucy treats these students as any good teacher would treat their pupils. She engages with them emotionally to the point where they can have a relationship where they can play and one side can win and other can lose without the potential for hard feelings or damaged self-image.Ruth from the dystopian novel, Never Let Me Go, is a character that first appears dominant and extroverted. "I knew exactly what she'd meant by her answer and smile: she was claiming the pencil case was a gift from Miss Geraldine. There could no mistake about this because it has been building up for weeks." (Ishiguro 52) She lies about where she got her pencil case to Kathy and begins
His most famous work is his Utopia, a book in which he created his version of a perfect society and gave his name to such conceptions ever after as "utopias." The word is of Greek origin, a play on the Greek word eutopos, meaning "good place." In the book, More describes a pagan and communist city-state in which the institutions and policies are governed entirely by reason. The order
Manipulation in Never Let Me Go Manipulation is a relatively dark part of interpersonal relationships that occurs when the manipulator has certain motivations or inner uncertainties. It generally stems from a feeling of insecurity or other forms of unhappiness. The manipulation process is then used to overcome or overshadow these feelings. According to Handelamn (2009, p. 45), "manipulation is not exactly coercion or persuasion or deception." Instead, according to the author,
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