Role Of ‘Artificial’ Hope At The Failure Of Medical Science : A Study Of Kazuo Ishiguro’s Klara And The Sun
DOI:
https://doi.org/10.47750/pnr.2022.13.S08.126Abstract
Since Mary Shelly’s Frankenstein (1800), readers have always differentiated between the human and the perspective of the artificial (if it can afford one). The Protagonist, Adam's engineered body is most probably the first of its kind that paved the way for a chain of science-fiction novels resulting in today’s genetically edited human children in Klara and the Sun (2021) by Kazuo Ishiguro, the Nobel Laureate of 2017. He essentially started writing fiction around Japanese characters in about 1982, moved on to writing eurocentric works in about 1989. Only after 2000, Ishiguro has gravitated towards science fiction exploring plots around cloning and AI. In 2004, Ishiguro, had written Never Let Me Go (2005) an eerie novel about clones and human body harvesting where Kathy, a clone, takes up the role of a ‘carer’ and provides hope to the organ ‘donor’ clones. Klara and the Sun (KATS) an urban area in a fictitious city in the United States (a market for French goods) with a central capitalist power, where children are genetically ‘uplifted’ and are accompanied by AI enabled Artificial friends(AFs). A resistance group living on the periphery who do not conform to this model of the society. Ishiguro paints a speculative picture of a futuristic society of automated machines and artificial intelligence: the commonly used elements of the sci-fi genre by the DC and Marvel Universe in contemporary times.
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- 2022-11-04 (2)
- 2022-11-04 (1)