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Never Let: Me Go By Kazuo Ishiguro

Ruth, not Kathy, is the novel’s most complex figure—she knows deferrals are fake but needs the lie to survive, making her the tragic realist.

Ruth embodies internalized oppression: she lies about a dream job (office work), clings to hierarchy among clones, and separates Kathy and Tommy. The deferral myth—the idea that two lovers might get extra time—is the only rebellion they can imagine, and it’s a lie. Their resignation is the true tragedy. never let me go by kazuo ishiguro

Here’s a concise, helpful breakdown of Kazuo Ishiguro’s Never Let Me Go to support writing a paper or deepening your analysis. The novel follows Kathy H., Tommy, and Ruth as students at Hailsham, an elite English boarding school. Gradually, they learn they are clones created to donate organs (”completing”) for “normal” humans. Their lives are predetermined: they will have a few years of relative freedom as young adults (”the Cottages”), then begin donations, ending in “completion” (death) around age 30. Major Themes for Analysis 1. Normalization of the Inhuman Ishiguro’s greatest horror is that characters rarely rage against their fate. They accept donation as natural, focusing instead on school gossip, love triangles, and rumors of “deferrals” (a false hope that genuine love postpones donations). This mirrors how people accept social hierarchies, biopolitics, or systemic exploitation. Ruth, not Kathy, is the novel’s most complex

At Hailsham, students create art (poetry, paintings) to prove they have inner lives—though guardians know their humanity is self-evident. The “Madame” and “gallery” represent society’s need to verify clones have souls before granting moral consideration. Art becomes a desperate performance for legitimacy. Their resignation is the true tragedy

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