The Search For Self Identity In The Novel Never Let Me Go

Art is a form of expression that comes from an individual’s creation. Whether it’s to be the creator or the admirer, the person’s interpretation is a true reflection of their soul. In his novel, Never Let Me Go, Kazuo Ishiguro creates a world where the main characters are torn between being who they are as clones and finding who they are as individuals. Ishiguro uses symbolism, imagery and characterization to highlight that, despite how humans see themselves as in control of who they are, whether people conform to society’s expectations or not, everyone is caught between the two in their search for identity.

Using Judy Bridgewater’s tape and the art gallery as symbols, Ishiguro illustrates that Kathy is capable of exceeding her conforming identity “clone” and express who she truly is through art. Some people hold dear to their hearts a toy or even a blanket from their childhood, but Kathy on the other hand holds the Judy Bridgewater cassette tape. To her, this cassette meant more than anything: “What made the tape so special for me was the one particular song: track number three, Never Let Me Go” (168). The art of music brings meaning to Kathy like nothing else ever has. The tape symbolizes Kathy’s innocence as she went to Hailsham and all the memories she created there. This brings forward the identity she has created for herself as a person, as the tape “really got to [her]” (177). The sound of the tape makes her have a desire for a connection that is emotional as well as physical. This speaks depth due to the surreal art of emotions that are showing when she plays the song: “There was no one else around, and I was playing this tape, this music. I was sort of dancing, with my eyes closed…’ To Kathy, music is art to her ears. The song brings her back to a different time and place which is why she closes her eyes. Never Let Me Go represents to her, a mother scared of losing her child. Listening to this song allows her to put herself in the person’s shoes and feel as the “mother” is. This representation she creates for the lyrics demonstrates her true identity as a human who has real feelings upon different circumstances. The second symbol that plays a major role in the novel is the art gallery. Many of the students create different forms of art for the gallery in order to expose themselves as someone other than clones: “She told Roy that things like pictures, poetry, all that kind of stuff, she said they revealed what you were like inside. She said they revealed your soul” (192). The purpose of creating art is to create their identity. The more the students make art, the more they find meaning within themselves. The art galleries are places that unfold positive or even negative news throughout the whole novel in the search for who they are as humans. The art gallery in Norfolk depicts when Ruth thought she found her “possible.” This shows how the students are in search for their past in order to continue as clones in the future. In the end, the Judy Bridgewater tape and the art gallery illustrate that art plays a major role in discovering who they are.

Through the use of imagery, animals and water are forms of art that represent parallels between how they are as clones and as real people. Students at Hailsham create animals through art. Tommy’s animal drawings are very detailed with emphasis on the small specifications: ‘tiny canals, weaving tendons, miniature screws and wheels were all drawn with obsessive precision’ (187). The way Tommy pays attention to each characteristic of the animals he draws, demonstrates the creative identity he creates for himself. The way the animals are described allows the reader to make the connection that the animals are like the clones in the sense that they’re treated like inhuman throughout the novel. The art he creates when drawing animals demonstrates his identity as a clone due to them not being in control of their fate. Real life animals are never shown, which therefore reveals the invisible wall of separation between clones and humans. The second form of imagery in the novel is through the description of water. The recurring use of water in the novel describes the student’s unpredictable life at Hailsham: “It was nice and tranquil…I knew I wasn’t in any danger” (277). The water describes that, at that moment, their life was peaceful without any drastic events. The way the water moves, and acts correlates to the way their life has its ups and downs. At some moments “they’ve got to let go, drift apart” and at other times they’re “holding on to each other… as hard as they can” (276). This shows that in order to find their true identity they have to let go of certain difficult moments and hold on to the things or people that matter. The thought of who they are cloned from and their past memories at Hailsham are instances that should be moved past as they hold dear to their heart the masterpieces that made great impacts such as certain teachers and friends. Through the imagery of animals and water, certain objects or things represent who they truly are.

Through the characterization of Kathy and Tommy, the novel critiques identity through the way others view the individual compare to the way the person sees themselves. Kathy faces self-doubt when coming into contact with herself: “it’s like walking past a mirror you’ve walked past every day of your life, and suddenly it shows you something else, something troubling and strange” (36). The quote itself is an altered image of herself through the form of abstract art. This makes it clear that Kathy struggles for self-acceptance of her true identity that stands right in front of her. Terrified of what was happening to their lives as clones, she searches for validation of the person she truly is, and not what others painted her to be. Tommy on the other hand, does not conform to the typical artistic talent of a Hailsham student, therefore is the outcast compared to the other students: “A lot of the time, how you were regarded at Hailsham, how much you were liked and respected, had to do with how good you were at “creating”” (16). Tommy is not like the rest of the students due to his lack of artistry, which helps shape most students into who they are at Hailsham. He is very different from the rest of the clones due to the way he seeks an alternative identity than the one he is forced to lead. This demonstrates that Kathy and Tommy, both have the determination to surpass the identity they grew up with.

In the novel Never Let Me Go by Kazuo Ishiguro, the search for identity is caught between two conflicting teachings: one of a clone and one of a human. The symbolism of the Judy Bridgewater’s tape and the art gallery describe Kathy’s identity through treasured objects and artwork. The imagery of animals and water show the vivid correlation between what they’re experiencing in the real world and the way objects are foretelling it. The characterization of Kathy and Tommy shows that despite their different personalities, they both have one thing in common: their quest to find their true selves. In the end, the two teachings eventually come together to create Kathy’s true identity.

Social Systems Depending On Disempowering People In Stasiland And Never Let Me Go

What do Stasiland and Never Let Me Go suggest about social systems that depend on disempowering people?

Plan:

  • Control and Surveillance
  • Different worlds set up by both regimes
  • Rebellion and Fight Back

In both Anna Funder’s Stasiland and Kazuo Ishiguro’s Never Let Me Go, respective regimes employ various methods to control its citizens. In many ways, both governments leave individuals with little power, essentially stripping them of their basic human rights. Surveillance is used in both worlds to monitor its people as a way to maintain control over their population who are seen as enemies. Furthermore, both worlds are constructed upon the idea of dislocation, with the objective of disconnecting its citizens from others. However, in some ways, citizens rebel and demonstrate a will to fight back. They are willing to sacrifice their own lives to escape and see their loved ones. Therefore, while both societies in Stasiland and Never Let Me Go disempower their people by controlling them, there are times where citizens rebel and fight back.

Stasiland and Never Let Me Go suggest that the implementation of an omnipresent surveillance system disempowers citizens. Funder’s depiction of East Germany suggests that there is no privacy or freedom of movement. For example, the fact that East Germans are “stopped by the police and asked to account for themselves” shows they are always on their guard and cannot move about freely. Funder’s use of interviews as well as statistics such as “the Stasi had 97000 employees and an additional 173000 informers” serve to highlight the severity of the control the regime enforces as well as the information about its citizens, “as the Stasi had so much information … that they thought everyone was an enemy, because everyone was under observation.” Funder further highlights the lack of privacy through the inclusion of interviews. The fact that the Stasi intercept Julia’s Italian boyfriend’s letters renders her powerless since she is prevented from studying and finding a job. She is subsequently raped and unable to prosecute her attacker but the “total surveillance damaged her the worst.” Furthermore, Funder demonstrates how the Stasi manage to create a blanket surveillance by encouraging people to betray each other since the regime exploited “the small deep human satisfaction of having one up on someone else.” This idea is echoed in Never Let Me Go, but betrayal operates on a more personal level rather than in the form of reporting people to authorities and creating a systematic betrayal of neighbours, but those who inform on others still have a sense of power. In this novel, the clones are restricted inside Hailsham and have no way of escaping their own fate even if they were to strike out on their own since the whole of society is against them. Therefore, the authorities do not need to worry about rebellion, which is a constant possibility in East Germany. Consequently, the constant surveillance that restricts people operates within friendship groups, since that is all the clones have to support them. Kathy’s open personality is exploited by Ruth and Tommy, and so she feels let down by her closest friends, “talking about her slap on the elbow thing could be seen as a betrayal, and she might well then have felt justified retaliating as she had.” Hence, the children lose their freedom, and are constantly aware that they can be betrayed by their friends at anytime. However, while the German citizens know that they are always being watched, for the clones, their surveillance is not so overt. They are locked into a confined environment where they are being watched by their guardians, so there is never a “good place for a discreet conversation … and the way sound travelled along the water was hard to predict; if people wanted to eavesdrop, it was the easiest thing to walk down the outer path and crouch down in bushes on the other side of the pond.” Another difference between the two texts is the way in which the writers present the surveillance. Here she aims to illustrate the extent to which the Stasi were prepared to go to restrict people’s freedoms, which ultimately bordered on the absurd. and Ishiguro demonstrate the level of intense surveillance in both states, but also the betrayal felt my citizens which can break relationships, thus highlighting the lack of power and voice people have in these two regimes.

Similarly, the worlds of both Ishiguro and Funder’s texts are dominated by a pervasive sense of dislocation which is set up by the two regimes. The Hailsham donors are depicted as utterly adrift in the world, primarily because they have no parents, and implied by Ruth that they are cloned ‘from trash’. Consequently, they have no feeling of continuity with the past, which partly explains Kathy’s attempt to reconstruct her journey in such vivid detail. Furthermore, the friendship groups developed by the Hailsham students are transitory and broken not only by the donors’ relocation to places with ‘only the most tenuous links’ to their old lives, but also by their impending mandatory duties as carers. Not only does this fragmentation hurt relationships, but the bodies of Kathy and those like her are also destined to be gradually torn into pieces ‘before (they) are even middle-aged.’ Funder’s version of this kind of disorder is more social and abstract, but equally damaging in its own way. The ‘iron curtain’ that divided Germany is reflected by the citizens’ experiences, as Frau Paul describes it, how ‘The Wall Went Straight Through (Her) Heart’. Ishiguro’s donors’ sense from infancy that they are born to be sacrificed for others, however they delude themselves, whereas the ties between East and West Berliners are instantaneously damaged when they ‘woke to a changed world’ one day. In this changed world the Stasi ‘had people everywhere’, and this all assumption of trust and community between people is strained or shattered, and it is impossible to know who was an informer. The fact that Funder’s explores the long-lasting effects of this social and physical rupture suggests the immense repercussions it has produced, as citizens still reminisce on the past. Hence, the societies created by these governments are aimed to disconnect people, as all humans crave belonging and a sense of community, as they both demonstrate the miserable bewilderment suffered by those who lack it.

However, in both texts, citizens have a chance to fight back and rebel, in hope of restoring their dignity and freedom. Funder describes Miriam’s attempt to climb over the treacherous wall, demonstrating courage and resilience and “recover from her experiences with the Stasi.” As a result, she is unable to fulfil her dream, and is ultimately locked in a cell with just “a tiny window of dull frosted glass recessed high up.” Despite the constant rebellion that is shown in Stasiland, in Hailsham, little fight is shown as they await for their completion. Donors rather focus on the recollection of memories, since it is “the only thing that cannot be taken from [them].” Kathy has been stripped of her loves and feels the need to fight against the process of forgetting, reassuring herself with “Hailsham with me, safely in my head, and that I’ll be something no one can take away.” She is particularly alert of the potential unreliability of memory, frequently making comments such as “maybe I’m remembering wrong.” Unlike the recollection of memories displayed in Never Let Me Go, Funder rather looks forward to the capitalist, reunified Germany. She suggests memory is simply a reminiscence of the past, which can have detrimental effects “what it hides and what it alters, but also for what it reveals”. This is reflected in present-day Germany, where artefacts and history of the GDR compile the city, leaving an everlasting nostalgia felt by the people of Germany. Hence, the ordinary citizens of both Stasiland and Never Let Me Go demonstrate some fight to rebel against their fellow regimes in hope of returning to their previous lives.

Overall, the social systems that are equipped in both worlds employ various methods of control to dictate and command its citizens. Funder’s vivid description of the surveillance methods used by the Stasi highlight the dysfunction of the GDR, leaving people with no power nor freedom. Similarly, the control that is set up by Hailsham also forces donors to be secluded from others, with little power to challenge. Therefore, both texts demonstrate the harsh realities that are built by both regimes, leaving citizens powerless and no choice but to accept their fate.

Self-Assessment:

  • I think I need to vary my sentence structure and use more quotes from both texts to support my points
  • I also think I need better knowledge of the text, and go deeper in discussing the topic
  • Also need better expression

Our Cloned Future: Kazuo Ishiguro’s Never Let Me Go And Michael Bay’s The Island

Has the arrival of a new science era created ethical anxiety about cloning?

What is Fear? Is it an emotion; thought or perhaps an illusion? The ‘New Scientist’ this week will explore the value of human life, or rather, a cloned human life by examining two different texts. Kazuo Ishiguro’s “Never Let Me Go” and Michael Bay’s “the Island” explore various social thoughts about our modern–day society.

Senior reporter Alen Abraham is here to investigate the author’s and director’s point of view on the social morality of a dystopian society.

Who doesn’t fear death? I certainly do. If you are one of those, there’s good news for you. Through making a copy of yourself, otherwise known as cloning, it is possible to increase your lifespan. Research has shown that ageing is not the main cause of death; it is the failure of vital organs.

What if we clone ourselves to take their organs for our own survival? However, is it morally ethical to have one’s clone continually donating their organs? Kazuo Ishiguro’s novel “Never Let Me Go” and Michael Bay’s “The Island” delves into the impacts of cloning to their audience.

Kazuo Ishiguro’s ‘Never Let Me Go’ is a science-fiction novel written in 2005. This

remarkable novel was also shortlisted for the Man Booker Prize in the same year of its publication. In the same year, the film ‘The Island’ which was directed by Michael Bay, was released and also comments on whether human cloning is ethical or not.

Ishiguro’s novel and Michael Bay’s film “The Island”

Through the creation of dolly in 1996 and the two primates in 2018; it is obvious that humans have the capability to create human clones. But the moral impacts of cloning on our society could be devastating. Both these texts show that clones are developed and harvested for their organs, simply for the purpose of human survival. But do you really think clones have souls like humans? if you think that clones have souls like humans is it morally correct to use them for our benefit?

In Ishiguro’s “Never Let Me Go”, Madame and the guardians took the clones artwork to prove to the real world that these poor creatures being harvested for their organs also had souls. Madame expresses her thoughts on this when she says, ‘We took away your art because your art would reveal your souls. Or to put it more finely we did it to prove you had souls at all’. This idea is further repeated by Miss Emily when she says, ‘Your art will reveal your inner selves! … your souls!’.

The idea of clones having souls was also proven by Michael Bay’s film “The Island” when the female protagonist Jordan-Two-Delta purchases ice-cream for human children rather buying it for herself. This selfless act of caring others over herself shows that clones have a pure heart and soul like a human.

Both the author and the filmmaker present the idea of clones having souls through two different scenes. Certainly, it would be heartless of us humans to treat clones as just another product that can be used and thereafter discarded; it would be completely selfish on our part to not consider them as another human being.

The two texts try to show that human clones don’t only have a soul, but they also have brains; they have the thinking capacity to know the difference between right and wrong, good and bad. For instance, in the novel, Kathy says, ‘This might all sound daft, but you have to remember that to us, at that stage in our lives, any place beyond Hailsham was like a fantasy land; we had only the haziest notions of the world outside and about what was and wasn’t possible there.’ This shows that Kathy can imagine a beautiful fantasy life outside Hailsham.

Similarly, in the film holographic technology was used to brainwash the clones to make them believe that they had survived a ‘world contamination’. Even though all the clones in the island are brainwashed, the central character Lincoln Six Echo proves that clones can have a thinking capacity. This is seen when he questions the president (Dr. Merrick) about the things that seem unexplainable and yet something so simple that definitely can be explained. He states, “Why is everyone wearing white all the time? It’s impossible to keep clean, I’m walking around, I get – I always get the grey stripe, I never get any colour.’

When Lincoln Six Echo poses the question about why ‘everyone’ wears white ‘all the time’, the filmmaker wants the audience to think about numerous things. Initially, he wants the audience to understand that these clones are like prisoners in a jail, where there’s no escape; they are doomed to die. Secondly, the director needs the audience to further recognise that Lincoln can think just like a human. The fact that the protagonist understands that it is illogical to wear a colour that quickly catches dirt shows that he perhaps feels that they are in a dull environment; where they do not even have the right to even choose their clothes. This idea of misleading clones is completely immoral as it is observed that they have a thinking capacity to differentiate good and bad.

The topic of clones having a soul and an intellectual thinking capacity leads into a more controversial topic; which is the right to make decisions. Being a human, it’s our basic right to make our own decisions. But is a clone eligible for these fundamental rights? “You’re not, like, a real person. Like me. You’re clones. You’re copies of people out here in the world.”

Here the maintenance supervisor at the cloning facility; ‘James McCord’ symbolises the society in terms of establishing clones as a ‘living human machines.’ The novel and the movie further indicate the decisions took by clones to earn more in their life.

The character Ruth says, ‘I was pretty much ready when I became a donor. It felt right. After all, it’s what we’re supposed to be doing, isn’t it?’. Here it is evident that Ruth decides to follow the fate that was set for all the clones, including herself, “being a donor”.

In ‘The Island’, the protagonist Lincoln Six Echo is found to be taking his own decision after knowing the fact that the “The Island” was a death punishment for them. Most likely he made the decision of living rather getting chopped-up for someone else. This is proven through various occasions; one of which includes their escape from the research facility. Additionally, during the detrimental conversation between Lincoln Six Echo and Tom Lincoln about each of their survival. Lincoln Six Echo expresses his decision by stating “Me Either”. This declaration has a major impact outlining the desire of wanting a life. More importantly, this demonstrates the general human ideology of caring themselves over others. Afterall, as humans it is our right to make various decisions over our live. Therefore, if clones have a thoughtful capability to make decisions for themselves, it is morally wrong to deny their right.

At the end, it is difficult to agree with the character McCord in the film ‘The Island’ when he says, ‘You’re not, like, a real person. Like me. You’re clones. You’re copies of people out here in the world.’ McCord has a viewpoint that clones aren’t real, but Never Let Me go and The Island proves that clones can feel and think; they have souls as well as a thinking capacity that allow them to make decisions and question things. So, what then makes a clone different from a human? The answer is “Nothing”. Therefore, our heartbeat should increase while we hear about the new scientific technologies which have the capability to start a moral anxiety within our society.

Reference list

  1. Sparknotes.com. (2020). SparkNotes: Never Let Me Go: Study Guide. [online] Available at: https://www.sparknotes.com/lit/never-let-me-go/ [Accessed 27 Feb. 2020].
  2. https://www.fantasticfiction.com, w. (2020). Kazuo Ishiguro. [online] Fantasticfiction.com. Available at: https://www.fantasticfiction.com/i/kazuo-ishiguro/ [Accessed 27 Feb. 2020].
  3. Anderson, J. (2020). Natural Causes: What Does it Mean to “Die of Old Age”. [online] Aplaceformom.com. Available at: https://www.aplaceformom.com/blog/2-6-2014-what-does-it-mean-to-die-of-old-age/ [Accessed 29 Feb. 2020].
  4. Coghaln, A. (2020). Scientists have cloned monkeys and it could help treat cancer. [online] New Scientist. Available at: https://www.newscientist.com/article/mg23731623-600-scientists-have-cloned-monkeys-and-it-could-help-treat-cancer/ [Accessed 5 Mar. 2020].
  5. Dolly.roslin.ed.ac.uk. (2020). The Life of Dolly | Dolly the Sheep. [online] Available at: https://dolly.roslin.ed.ac.uk/facts/the-life-of-dolly/index.html [Accessed 5 Mar. 2020].

The Attitudes To The Past In The Texts The Glass Menagerie And Never Let Me Go

An attitude can be defined as a feeling or opinion about something or someone. In Williams’ The Glass Menagerie and Ishiguro’s Never Let Me Go, there are several attitudes to the past revealed in the texts. These include escapism, regret, comfort, the view that the past is difficult to leave behind and comes round full circle.

The past is something that has gone by in time or is no longer existing, a definition that Faulkner challenges by suggesting that “The past is not dead. It is not even past.” This demonstrates that in The Glass Menagerie, the past is a prominent theme used to explore the complexity of human nature, a technique that is also clear in Kazuo Ishiguro’s Never Let Me Go. Different attitudes to the past are explored in depth through character while typifying the unreliability of memory in both texts. An attitude that is reiterated throughout is the conflict between the past and the future, highlighted by the context of The Great Depression in Williams’ The Glass Menagerie and the advancement of science in Ishiguro’s Never Let Me Go.

Both Ishiguro and Williams recognise that the past can be viewed as painful, giving an individual a reason to want to escape and focus on the future. In The Glass Menagerie, Tom (the narrator) speaks from the future to reflect Williams’ desire to escape his home life as a young boy; Tom sees his life as a prison ‘sentence’, like a punishment resulting from actions that took place in the past. This reinforces the negative inferences to prison, from which he wants to escape. This suggests Tom’s desire to leave home, and his seemingly innocent journeys to the fire ‘escape’ were not coincidental, but a symbolic manifestation of his subconscious to get away. Charles Matthews believed that The Glass Menagerie was “the most nakedly autobiographical” of Williams’ texts, and this can be agreed as Williams relives his youth through his narrator – Tom. In real life, Williams used his writing to escape from his complicated relationship with his father, a life of drugs and abuse, and rejection from society because of his homosexuality; similar to Tom’s dependence on the accessibility of the ‘fire escape’ – albeit a temporary escape from reality. This idea of escapism is also conveyed through Laura who ‘lives in a world of her own’, finding comfort in separating herself from reality to indulge in ‘her own’ world of little glass ornaments, to escape real life. Michael Billington stated that Williams “acknowledges economic realities”, using the Wingfield family as the embodiment of the futility of the American dream. Each character in the play attempts to escape the reality of a broken America during The Great Depression. The Wingfield’s attitudes to the past reflect the feelings of Americans in real life and how their only way out of the melancholy in society was to find their method of escape. On the other hand, in Never Let Me Go, when a ball falls outside the grounds of Hailsham, the students are scared to leave. They do not attempt to escape their hated reality like the Wingfield family, which emphasises their lack of autonomy as clones.

Although Ishiguro and Williams’ characters make an effort to escape their pasts, both texts acknowledge that the past is difficult to leave behind because it helps shape the future. In the first scene of the play, Tom ‘Turn[s] back time,’ and automatically introduces the concept of the past that goes on to dominate the entire text. This tone is replicated in the first chapter of Never Let Me Go when Kathy H. informs the reader that she had made attempts ‘to leave the past behind’ and failed. It could be argued that both characters had already failed to leave the past behind this early on in the texts by re-telling their stories; Kathy admits that she failed when she ‘stopped resisting’ her thoughts about Hailsham and Tom when he turns back time. The verb ‘turn’ emphasises that Tom is in control, he is in control of his life and his future, unlike Kathy whose future is determined by her makers, reminding the reader of her lack of humanity. Ishiguro uses the gerund ‘resisting’ to suggest that bringing the past into the present is an element of innate behaviour that makes resisting difficult and almost unnatural. Louis Menand described Ishiguro as “an ironist.” There is irony in Kathy’s failure to resist as it portrays her as more human than Tom who does not mention any resistance to revisiting his past. Kathy’s ‘resistance’ humanises her, to appear less like a “freak of nature”, which is the attitude of contemporary readers who rejected the idea of cloning after the Dolly the sheep experiment in 1996. It could be argued that it was Ishiguro’s intention to mould Kathy in a light that is so human that she evokes thoughts that further development of scientific technology was a bad thing. Being a dystopian novel, this attitude to the past and how it informs future technology in Never Let Me Go suggests that the past is not dead, but it lives on naturally within man as a foundation to build on in the future and provide an opportunity to learn as imperfect beings.

As imperfect beings, the past often leaves individuals with deep feelings of regret and the urge to go back and change what happened. In Never Let Me Go, Ishiguro uses Ruth to emphasise the weight of the past and heaviness of regret. To ‘free’ herself from the burden of keeping Kathy and Tommy apart, which was ‘the worst thing’ she ever did, she attempted to change Kathy and Tommy’s future for the better, knowing she could not change the past, by getting them a ‘deferral.’ James Procter believes that “Ishiguro’s novels are preoccupied with memories, their potential to digress and distort, to forget and to silence, and, above all, to haunt.” Arguably, Ruth felt ultimately haunted by what she did in the past. It could be argued that Ishiguro uses Ruth to parallel the ‘haunting’ that he felt from his past. Born nine years after the atomic bombing of his hometown Nagasaki in 1945, Ishiguro would have to carry that pain and have an urge to change the past, like Ruth. A similar theory can be applied to Amanda in The Glass Menagerie but for her, some elements of the past are forgotten. In the text, Williams presents the idea that Amanda has a selective memory by often avoiding the topic of her husband in any conversation, a man who ‘fell in love with long-distance’, shattering any dreams she had for the future. The ‘blown up’ photograph of the father in the living room is a visual reminder of the past. This represents how Amanda’s memories of Mr. Wingfield were an emotional burden.

Attitudes towards the past are not always negative. Although the past has connotations of regret, the past can be a source of comfort and even distort an individual’s reality. Like Tom, Amanda’s escapism separates her from the life that she hates but instead of dreaming of the future, Amanda is stuck in her own bubble, characterised by the sweet memories of her youth. In particular, Amanda adopts the idea of ‘Southern Belle’ which is based on Williams’ mother. This demonstrates the conditioning of young women to value their social status more than anything else. Hovis argues that “Amanda adopts the role of the belle in an effort to survive within a social milieu in which they are disempowered.” After social class had lost its value, Amanda continued to hold onto the notion of its importance for survival, even after losing everything. Amanda’s selective memory is used as a defence mechanism, one that evokes feelings of pride in one area and shame in the other. Williams makes it clear that Amanda uses her memories of an untainted and privileged youth with her many ‘gentlemen callers’ to provide comfort from a life characterised by a failed marriage and poverty. Kevin Catchpole argues that Amanda is “the inadequate, self-centred mother…locked in absorption in her own lost youth.” exhibiting the fragmented nature of her reality and her psychological dependence on purely the ‘good’ aspects of her past. She may do this not only to maintain her mental stability but also to keep her family together, by providing them with hope for the future. Comparably, distortion of reality is portrayed in Never Let Me Go through Chrissie, who clings hopefully to the possibility of being deferred from donations. In the past, there were rumours that couples in love could get their donations postponed and go on to ‘work in a clothes shop’ or ‘go on to be a park keeper’, which gave Chrissie hope of a different reality to what she knew. For clones, their only future was to ‘[…] donate [their] vital organs,’ which Miss Lucy made clear was their function. As a result of this hopeful rumour, Ruth became determined to maintain her relationship with Tommy, to have the opportunity for a deferral, regardless of how this destroyed her friendship with Kathy and Tommy. The effects of the speculation reveal to the reader the importance of the past, and the influence it has in the future. Like Chrissie and Ruth, Laura also lives her life fixated on things from the past. Laura is a character based on Williams’ schizophrenic sister Rose, she is depicted as chronically shy and fragile. Dominic Maxwell believes that Laura is, “afraid of the real world,” illustrated through her deep fascination with the ‘delicately spun’ glass animals that are her only reminder of the Wingfield’s old life of luxury. It is also a reminder of how quickly and easily their wealth and comfort was destroyed, represented by the fragility of the glass menagerie. The menagerie seems to provide Laura with hope in an oppressed society where there is none. Later on in the text when Jim breaks Laura’s glass unicorn, it represents her illusive world being shattered. One critic argued that Jim “becomes so engrossed in the past that he not only breaks Laura’s favorite piece of glass, but he also breaks Laura’s dreams and hopes.” This suggests that Jim was just another form of escape for Laura; he gave her hope — like the menagerie — that she could have a better future. But Jim ‘hurt [Laura’s] feelings’ and disappointed her like the America that promised a “dream” for a life. Laura, Jim and Amanda’s inability to leave the past behind fragments their reality like the broken glass from the menagerie. While Ruth and Chrissie’s inability to do so causes regret and the desire to change what has already been done. Although this suggests that it is human nature for elements of the past not to die or be forgotten, it shows that the purpose of the past is also to inform the future.

Another attitude is that history repeats itself. There is an overbearing sense of this notion at the end of both texts. In Never Let Me Go, Kathy witnesses the death of Ruth and then Tommy before going on to start her own ‘donations’ like many other clones before her. The noun ‘donation’ itself in the context of the novel highlights the selfishness of human nature, cloning real human beings only to take from them for our own benefit. Ultimately the clones live to fulfil a specific function and then die once they have completed their task. While this sounds similar to human life, in the novel Miss Emily revealed to Kathy and Tommy that their art was taken away to ‘prove [they] had souls at all.’ By questioning their humanity, they are simply reduced to experiments. For a clone, their past is their future and all with the same ending. Some critics argue that Never Let Me Go is about how “we attempt to run away from the idea of our own mortality.” An example of this is shown through Kathy and Tommy’s attempt to get a ‘deferral’. Knowing this, one of the most unnatural events in Never Let Me Go is when Kathy, Tommy, and Ruth just seem to accept their fate instead of fighting to change it. Being Human, Ishiguro was able to leave his rehabilitating city and change his future by moving to England, an autonomy that the clones lacked. This reminds the reader that as much as all three characters seem human, they are ultimately still products of an experiment and only have a certain level of control over their ‘life.’ In comparison, at the end of The Glass Menagerie Tom reveals that he finally made attempts to escape his past and change his future by following in his ‘father’s footsteps’, a prime example of history repeating itself. Tom ‘was pursued by something,’ as he tried to escape his past. In the play, he says that it was his ‘sister [who] touched [his] shoulder’ and prevented him from moving on. In this final scene, Laura is the personification of the past; she follows Tom and draws him back, reiterating that the past is not dead.

Overall, Both writers have formed this central attitude that the past either pursues or is pursued but never lost or left behind, echoing a similar message in Ishiguro’s An Artist of the Floating World where Ono is pursued or haunted by the past. While this idea is more evident in The Glass Menagerie than Never Let Me Go, when discussed, both texts highlight that confrontation with the past can force us to contemplate the events of yesterday and alter ourselves for tomorrow. Both writers point to the continuous struggle between the past and the present, with each constantly trying to dominate over the other. In conclusion, I confirm that “The past is not dead. It is not even past.” as it is clear in both texts that the past can either aid in growth, which is the case for Tom and Kathy, or destruction illustrated through Ruth and Amanda.

Genres And The Identity In Kazuo Ishiguro’s Never Let Me Go And Jennifer Egan’s Black Box

In this essay, I will explore the way Kazuo Ishiguro’s Never Let Me Go and Jennifer Egan’s Black Box deal with genre and identity. Ishiguro combines science-fiction and bildungsroman in his work to depict the touching story of a human clone, Kathy H, as she develops from childhood and faces her fatal destiny as an organ donor and to explore the politics of a system that seeks to delegitimise her identity and exploit her. Similarly, Egan’s work explores science-fiction paired with the espionage genre and how a cybernetically enhanced spy can carry out her patriotic duty without comprising her sense of self. I will argue that these authors manipulate and subvert conventional genres to pose questions of what constitutes humanity in dehumanised dystopian settings as well as that they provide frameworks within Never Let Me Go and Black Box with which a contemporary reader can critique the exploitation of those deemed inhuman by the governments present in their works.

Kazuo Ishiguro’s Never Let Me Go imagines an alternate version of the 1990s as a dystopian reality where science has advanced to allow human cloning for the express purpose of harvesting organs for transplants. The combination of science-fiction and bildungsroman is not typical due to how deeply entrenched the latter is in a nineteenth-century setting . However, as Ishiguro demonstrates, the two genres are not mutually exclusive and can indeed complement one another. As Carol Guesse’s exploration of Never Let Me Go states, the work fits many of the criteria needed for a bildungsroman; the boarding school narrative, internal development of our hero, the emphasis on art and culture and the ‘shaping of the protagonist through the experience of numerous obstacles one encounters whilst trying to became an adult,’ . Throughout Kathy H’s narrative we are given an in depth look into her upbringing at Hailsham school, specifically formed to protest the government’s inhumane treatment of clones. In a typical bildungsroman, Guesse explains that, ‘in such a story, the hero follows an educational programme and is subject to an external pressure or influence which helps shape him, for example a teacher’ . While Kathy’s experience follows this formula, Ishiguro uses this seemingly banal setting to lay the foundations of a sinister system wherein the clones are ‘told and not told’ about their role as donors as Miss Lucy, a guardian, tells them. This method used by the school to ‘[smuggle] into our [the clones] heads a lot of basic facts about our futures’ normalises their horrible fate and ensures that the children consider the process of donations and, ultimately, their death as commonplace and as their duty. As Stacy Ivan notes, ‘the protagonists’ failure to acknowledge the atrocities contributes to the perpetuation of the dystopian systems.’ This early acceptance of their purpose guarantees that the students will not rebel against the system and is an incredibly effective contribution from Ishiguro as the discomfort that stems from the complete submission of the clones allows the reader to consider how unjust their treatment is and consequently critique the imagined world order in Never Let Me Go.

In traditional bildungsroman narratives, the maturation of the protagonist is dependent on socialisation and being accepted in mainstream society. Again, this is true for Never Let Me Go as Kathy’s social relationships are what drive the plot and her personal growth. However, during a discussion with Tommy, Kathy recalls that they ‘had been taught to think about each other.’ In teaching the children to only consider themselves, Hailsham is once again ensuring that the clones will not concern themselves with the outside world and perhaps preparing them for roles as carers where they will have to look after each other professionally. Interestingly, this is a departure from the classic bildungsroman form wherein the protagonist learns to join and flourish in society. Ishiguro’s characters leave Hailsham and ‘gradually de-socialise themselves’ as Guesse aptly states, ‘They leave a community where they were never set aside to lead lives of outcasts in a society that needs them as much as it fears them.’ The shift from a boarding school setting to general society usually marks a similar shift from childhood to maturity but despite this Never Let Me Go emphasises how Kathy H and her peers are alienated by a populace who ‘did their best not to think about you.’ as Miss Emily explains to Kathy and Tommy, ‘[T]hey wanted you back in the shadows.’ Consequently, Kathy spends the majority of her time (after her brief stint at the cottages) travelling alone, dealing with medical staff or with whichever donor she is caring for. By sentencing his protagonist to a mostly solitary life, Ishiguro reinforces the horror of a system that demands that these clones be isolated from the very people they sacrifice themselves for.

W.H Bruford says succinctly that ‘social relationships matter less for themselves than for [what] they help articulate’ and in a novel which questions whether clones have souls, the attachments Kathy forms, with Ruth and Tommy especially, articulate that these beings born of science are just as capable of love and a full spectrum of emotion as their counterparts in wider society. Love is what drives Kathy and Tommy to seek out their Hailsham Headmistress so that they may put in a request to defer their donations for a short while and be together. Here, the emphasis placed on art in the bildungsroman comes into play and the pair use their art as evidence that they are truly in love as, Tommy explains to Miss Emily, ‘it would help show you what we [Tommy and Kathy] were like,’ because ‘[o]therwise how would you know when students came to you and said they were in love?’ The idea that these characters must prove their love is striking, particularly as this test comes near the conclusion of the novel and the reader has already witnessed the proof of their devotion to one another over hundreds of pages. The injustice of Kathy’s position is only solidified at the book’s close after both Ruth and Tommy have been taken from her by a ruthless government system and she is left in mourning without any more meaningful relationships to speak of.

Moreover, Francois Jost asserts ‘The shaping of the protagonist through the experience of numerous obstacles one encounters whilst trying to become an adult is the principal defining feature of the bildungsroman.’ These obstacles present themselves as ‘events that are not inherently meaningful or exceptional’ but which retrospectively become significant. Never Let Me Go has several of these moments for Kathy which allow for personal growth, for example, her struggle coming to terms with her libido and the idea of a possible as well as the emotional turmoil of her turbulent relationships with Tommy and Ruth. However, I maintain that in Ishiguro’s interpretation of the bildungsroman that these moments are written to impress upon the reader the futility of the protagonist’s struggles. Even Kathy voices frustration at the things she has been made to do under the direction of Hailsham officials in spite of their knowledge of where she and the others will end up, ‘Why did we do all of that work in the first place? Why train us, encourage us, make us produce all of that [art]? If we’re just going to give donations anyway, then die, why all those lessons? Why all those books and discussions?’

Ultimately, both the reader and Kathy are hyper-aware that her fate as a donor is inevitable and that despite the pains she takes to mature into a well-adjusted adult, she is doomed to be used for her organs and discarded. Ishiguro’s message here is a melancholy one and would be in opposition to Jost who has declared that bildungsroman must end happily , however, Susan Suleiman contends that ‘they can have a positive or negative ending, the only difference being the message they send’ This aligns itself nicely with the novelist’s bittersweet use of bildungsroman which seems to communicate the dangers of exploitation and the moral quandary involved in cloning technology in lieu of the traditional tale of social assimilation.

In Jennifer Egan’s work wherein an unnamed heroine, cybernetically enhanced by the American government, undertakes a mission for data acquisition there are enough nods to the espionage genre that Black Box can be considered commentary and even a manipulation of the genre.To contextualise, Allan Hepburn’s novel on the culture of espionage provides excellent examples of what defines the genre and its protagonists in terms of recruitment, convictions, gender and ideology. Egan’s speaker seems to fit the criteria for the first of Hepburn’s stipulations, ‘Recruitment appeals to an individual’s desire to serve the state, not to swerve from its power.’ Black Box’s protagonist is filled with joy at the prospect of fulfilling her patriotic duty and clearly states, ‘[A]t long last you’ve [the speaker] found a goal worthy of your considerable energies.’ and is propelled to complete her mission with the knowledge that ‘by accomplishing this goal, you’ll have helped to perpetuate American life as you [the speaker] know it.’ The desire to undertake her duty is stated explicitly and so Egan is in line with the first of the genre guidelines. Even so, she quickly departs from the norm and instead of fulfilling Hepburn’s second edict that the spy is ‘always a political identity with an allegory of intrigue,’ crucially has her protagonist be an average citizen; ‘You are an ordinary person undertaking an extraordinary task.’ This departure is perhaps the most striking in Egan’s work and is made possible because ‘Technology has afforded ordinary people a chance to glow in the cosmos of human achievement.’ This shift in the practicalities of espionage is made possible by cybernetic enhancement which allows anyone to be physically capable of reconnaissance and is praised as ‘The new heroism.’ where ‘the goal is to transcend individual life, with its petty pains and loves, in favour of the dazzling collective.’ The exaltation of the collective is not unusual in the espionage genre, however, it is made clear in Egan’s imagined world that the individual is of little value. This can be inferred from both from the title Black Box and from the language surrounding the agent’s overarching purpose; ‘Your [the agent’s] physical person is our Black Box; without it, we have no record of what has happened on your mission.’ The evolution of the spy from extraordinary individual with a very particular set of skills to ‘one of hundreds’ not only demystifies the mysterious traditional agent but dehumanises the protagonist and reduces her to a glorified data bank. This is cleverly reinforced throughout the work, particularly when the hero recalls her training: ‘Some of you will not survive, but those who do will be heroes.’ The very slight but noticeable difference in Egan’s phrasing emphasises that only those who manage to return their bodies to the government will be hailed as heroes and strongly implies that those who perish in their pursuit of their duty and fail to deliver their data a.k.a their bodies will be forgotten and dismissed as failures.

Further, Black Box presents a unique take on the espionage genre as unlike the traditional narrative in which the protagonist is permitted ‘his moments of revolt and anguish.’ Egan’s speaker is required to record almost all of her interactions using ‘Field instructions, stored in a chip beneath [the agent’s] hairline,’ which serves ‘as both a mission log and a guide for others undertaking this work.’ The near constant surveillance ensures behaviour out with the bounds of standard training is discourages and is nowhere near as relaxed as the procedures of the classic spy narrative where the leading man is granted full autonomy. Amelia Precup very succinctly describes the issue in that a woman is reduced to:

‘[A] technologically enhanced body, “programmed” to complete a mission while ceaselessly fighting human emotions and impulses, the disposable body used as a black box, instrumental to storing and transferring information, and the female body reduced to the status of a sexual object, raped, displayed as ornament and discarded when deemed useless.’

Despite the voluntary nature of the speaker’s service, the government’s apparent disregard for the agent’s wellbeing is a bitter pill to swallow and Egan seems to critique the system whereby she is purposefully placed in harms way as a ‘Beauty’ to be knowingly exploited and physically assaulted. The author’s use of ‘The Dissociation Technique’ as an escape from physical violation is notable and solidifies the prioritisation of body over consciousness as the protagonist becomes ‘fully detached from [her] physical self.’ The body of our hero is beaten and even shot before the end of her mission and though this is dismissed by her as one of necessary ‘forms of sacrifice.’ It is impossible to ignore the physical and mental burden of the task assigned to her. Not only is the agent’s physical heath at risk but Egan’s interpretation of cybernetic enhancement allows her memories to be forfeit, explained during a transfer of data to her body, ‘the memories dislodged will be your [the agent’s] own.’ The high cost of service is apparent and Katherine Hayles study is useful here as she examines the way ‘autonomy [and] individuality was being systematically challenged and disassembled — in a whole variety of fields, among them cybernetics.’ This idea that individuality has become obsolete in Egan’s imagined world is very effective in painting a harsh picture of a dystopian government that values the functionality of a body over the life of its citizens.

A shared aspect of both Kazuo Ishiguro’s and Jennifer Egan’s works is the emphasis that is placed on memory in Never Let Me Go and Black Box. In each work, memory is used as a pathway for the reader to the identity of each of the protagonists. John Locke’s philosophy that ‘personal identity [is] founded on consciousness (i.e. memory) and not on the substance of the body.’ is extremely helpful in examining the formation of identity in these works of science-fiction where the protagonists have been cloned and cybernetically enhanced, respectively, as both women use memory as a way to rationalise and cope with their traumatic experiences as well as to simply reminisce to the assumed listener. For Kathy H, Virginia Yeung asserts that ‘structuring one’s past experience and attempting to understand it as a unified whole is essentially an act of establishing an identity.’ And so the genre of bildungsroman itself works to structure and form the identity of Ishiguro’s protagonist. Strikingly, when Kathy H reflects on Tommy’s insistence that finding the original version of her lost tape is more important than finding a copy, she argues that the memories even the copy generate are just as important, ‘The memories I value most, I don’t ever see them fading. I lost Ruth, then I lost Tommy, but I won’t lose my memories of them’ Here, the contents of the vessel, whether it be the tape or Kathy herself as a copy, are held as valuable in themselves in a beautiful reflection of the book’s central themes. Indeed, Yeung insists ‘Kathy’s autobiographical narrative is a subversive act of protest [to] assert some form of autonomy in the face of a brutal regime.’ This furthers my belief that Ishiguro’s work is a statement against systemic exploitation of the marginalised and the underrepresented among us in society.

In Egan’s text, the presence of personal thoughts and memories is framed as an infringement upon the collection of ‘meaningful’ data and it is suggested in training that ‘Where stray or personal thoughts have intruded, you may delete them.’ The assumption that a person’s identity would be of no use is a cynical one yet Egan’s speaker proves throughout the piece that memories of her husband, her home and her past are extremely worthwhile and motivational. Memories of her husband and home are used to motivate and reinforce her convictions like so, ‘Reflect on the many reasons you can’t yet die: you need to see your husband. You need to have children. You need to tell the movie star that he has an eighth child, and that she is a hero.’ These small reassurances and reflections allow the reader to slip past the cold technological voice of the dispatches to the human identity underneath. The memories are spread sparingly throughout the work and in doing so, Egan, strips the speaker down to the bare essentials of who she is beyond an agent of government and impresses upon the reader the importance of individual identity. Interestingly, the narrative takes the notion of memory and applies it to both the human and technological parts of the protagonist; the dislodgement of memories due to the Data Surge, as discussed earlier in my analysis, ‘takes its toll on the individualistic centre of the traditional Western discourse,’ and brings Locke’s theory that identity can only be extended backwards as far as actions and thoughts can be recalled to the fore and begs the question – if the speaker dislodges certain memories, is a new identity formed and is she therefore a ‘new woman’? The answer to this question is unclear. However, in Ebony Daley-Carey’s study of postmodern identities they discuss the tendency in contemporary fiction to construct identities ‘as contradictory, unsettlingly and fluctuating, or as works-in-progress’ This trend in contemporary fiction is undoubtedly relevant to the formation of identity in Egan’s protagonist as her identity fluctuates due to the government mandated memory loss.

In both Kazuo Ishiguro’s Never Let Me Go and Jennifer Egan’s Black Box the authors take a classic genre, working in tandem with the science-fiction genre – bildungsroman and espionage, respectively – and alters them in meaningful ways in order to prioritise the critique and explore the theme of government exploitation. Using these altered genres and their conventions to highlight the formation of identity in characters who could be considered less than human as clones or as cyborgs is a striking way of delivering commentary on human rights and how we, as readers, interact with them.

The Role And Theme Of Past In The Glass Menagerie And Never Let Me Go

Both Ishiguro and Williams explore many aspects of the past, including how it defines and contours their characters’ identities. Characters like Amanda and Kathy dwell on their past to bring them comfort and an escape from the depressing reality of their situation. ‘Never Let Me Go,’ Ishiguro portrays the past to be a memory that Kathy desires to cling on to cope with her problems. Both of the authors to a certain extent show that ‘the past is not dead’ and that it is what the characters deeply need as humans to hold on, many of these characters like Amanda repeatedly talks about her past which makes us as the readers believe that she lives in both the past and the present. However, in some views it can be argued that ‘the past is dead’ and that most of the characters forget and move on from their past. For example, Tom who goes to the movies to live in a world of dreams and fantasies and not experiencing his past and even worse the problems he’s facing in the present. Ishiguro’s interest in “blending psychological realism with science fiction” is reflected in the plot of ‘ Never Let Me Go’ when Miss Lucy told her class about their purpose “you’ll start to donate your vital organs”. . . And it also links with the historical events that took part which Ishiguro was most interested about. For example; Dolly the sheep and cloning and also post-war in Japan.

Escapism is one of the aspects explored by both authors to define the characters’ pasts and how well they cope with it . Characters like Amanda and Kathy constantly mention their past to prevent themselves from experiencing reality. Amanda being ‘an inadequate, self-centered mother that looked in her own lost youth’ shows her attachment to her past that stops her from seeing the reason why Laura can’t get any “gentleman callers’’. It is almost like Amanda is contouring Laura into something she’s not and her constant nagging about table manners shows the type of status she wants her children to experience. Perhaps it could be her replaying her past with the use of Laura, also Ishiguro’s use of first person narrative in his novel allowed the readers and Kathy to build a connection which allows her past to become personal and more realistic, and her repeatedly talking about her past was a way for her to cling on to her memories with her loved ones . This automatically created huge empathy for the clones as their purpose in life was to complete their donation. As mentioned Kathy’s past to the reader comes across reliable because of her honesty “I don’t remember exactly’’ highlights the fragile nature of memory and her fragmented memory of her past isolates her from the depressing reality she faced with her friend’s death to experiencing the pain the donors went through.The use of the pronoun “I” demonstrates Kathy’s full acceptance of her vivid memory and how invalid it may be to the story. Ishiguro hints to the readers that the past is inescapable for Kathy because that is the only way she is able to live life by living in her past. This automatically shows that the past ‘is not even the past’ for characters like Kathy and Amanda but a way of them living.

Williams uses Tom to explore the guilt associated with the past, and how it affects individuals. This can be seen through Tom explaining to the audience that the play is a ‘memory play’. His illusions enter him into a world of fantasy and dreams, and that is why he is always going to the movies.“Whenever I pick up a shoe, I shudder a little thinking how short life is and what I am doing’’ implies how desperate he felt at the time before he left all his problems behind. The noun ‘shoes’ indicates freedom and the fact that Tom ‘shudders’ every time he picks up his shoes shows the hesitation and the fear he felt to leave everything behind. But the reason for his “ shudder” could be that he is tired of the never ending cycle of him working at the factory and that is why he leaves all his problems behind which leads to his excessive feeling of guilt. His “inability to escape a psychological loss of space no matter how much physical distance is attained” portray the after effect his past has on him. At the beginning of the play he mentions that the play is a ‘memory play’ meaning that his past “ memory becomes his eternal prison as he struggles to reconcile his past and present”And so he goes out to the movies to live in a world full of fantasy. The only time he thinks about the past was when he left his sister and the guilt he is feeling is what’s causing him to think about his past. Family tension and economical frustration was the cause of many Dreams from not being accomplished. The American Dream for many families was unreachable because of economic frustration. However, Amanda was a believer in Dreams because of her past social status. She used Laura to replay her past and that meant that her dreams for her would be achieved without her physically working for it. ‘Tom survives only on dreams of the future’ indicates the type of dreams and life he wishes to live in and by going to the movies his dreams become an illusion for his future.The critic highlights this because the movies enables him to do this. It’s ironic that Tom shudders when he looked at his shoe, this would perhaps be the memory of the author Williams remembering the type of lifestyle he once lived in as he worked at a shoe factory.

The contrast of Amanda’s past and her future differs as she goes from being very wealthy to being financially unstable and the constant reminder of her past brings her security because she is able to remind those who are born disadvantaged the life she lived. “The present becomes the past, and the past turns into everlasting regret if you don’t plan for it!’ Implies that the past is not dead but more or so visible in the present and this was shown through Amanda who never fails to talk about her past. The past being an ‘everlasting regret’ indicates the regret and the obsession she has over her youthful past. It could perhaps be that she wanted to encourage her daughter to change her future so she is not dwelling on her past as much as Amanda. During the publication of the novel many families struggled to escape poverty and financial problems and mostly relied on their husbands for comfort. Amanda raising her children in a house without a father has allowed her past to punish her and bring her a sense of regret because of the huge contrast between her stable youthful past to a life where she is financially struggling. This was shown clearly with the repetition of “ gentlemen callers’’ conveying the huge contrast between her past and how her past is an illusion more or so like Laura’s glass menagerie. During the dinner with Jimmy, Amanda wears a dress that was meant for women that were looking for a gentleman caller, and her wearing the dress supports the view that she still wishes to be young and free. This shows how captivated and obsessed she is with her past that it got to the point where she started to act out her past. ‘Debutante Ball was a formal dance where women wore elegant gowns’ and men wore tuxedos to try and get married. Amanda refers to them as ‘gentlemen callers’ because it allowed her to showcase her economic status. She represents dependent women at the time as she is more concerned on Tom because she wants him to economically support her and so makes her socially acceptable to marriage being a goal.

Guilt is excessively shown throughout ‘The Glass menagerie’. Tom’s constant reminder of his sister being vulnerable shows how guilty and regretful he is of his past because he left them to fulfill his dreams he is the “only young man I know of who ignores the fact that the future becomes present, the present past, and the past turns into everlasting regret” the use of the noun ‘young’ highlights the fulfillments of the The American Dream because the young wanted to escape entrapment and become free from poverty. Guilt for Tom is what his past represents this is because he was able to escape and his sister and mother weren’t able to. On the other hand, Tommy in ‘Never Let Me Go’ thinks about the past because there was nothing for him to dream about that he wanted in the future. ‘Do you remember…’ supports this because his life was already planned and there was no escape for him. It could also be argued that Tommy didn’t want to think about his past and only does it to leave a mark for Kathy and to be the first one to find her cassette. Overall, it could be argued that Tommy wants to achieve the future that he set himself, being that he finds Kathy’s cassette before she does. Ishiguro in his novels made sure that his personal life did not interfere with his work. And the purpose of the novel could have been to display the emotions and problems society faced for example; the post-war in Japan and Dolly the sheep. Ishiguro himself struggled to fit into a new environment as he migrated to England from Japan to live a stable life and this is seen through the clones when they’re isolated from society.

The past for characters like Kathy and Laura use it to play a happy part of their lives. They were repeatedly trying to live in a world full of perfection as their past allowed them to be mentally close to either their friends and loved ones, and clinging on to their past makes them very vulnerable because they are unable to live in the present. For Kathy her past is the only way to live as mentioned before her life was already planned and so the only way she would live freely is in her past.Ishiguro goes on to note that “childhood memories have a special quality” which portrays the importance of the past for Kathy as she was unable to make her own future. However, for Laura her past prevents her from moving on, it’s as though she doesn’t want to forget some of her past like the name Jimmy gave for her illness “Blue Roses”, the mispronunciation of ‘pleurosis’ which connotes to the idea that Jimmy was able to make her illness into something beautiful and positive. The colour ‘Blue’ symbolises trust, peace and loyalty and with the use of “Blue Roses” reveals her acceptance to society rather than looked down upon because of her illness. It could also be argued that with memory of Jimmy and Kathy’s past is what makes them as individuals different because they learn to accept their flaws and their already planned future.

In conclusion, both authors represent the past to be something unforgettable and a burden to some characters like Tom because he is unable to move on even after he has escaped. He is a character that is haunted by his past after he had left all his problems, this could portray the confession he might be making to audiences or Williams could be showing the struggles he and his family faced during The Great Depression. Overall, the past has helped many characters to feel included but some feel trapped and find it hard to escape and find their own happiness from their past.