Never Let Me Go Dystopian Analysis

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Never Let Me Go
Who am I? What is my purpose of life? Sometimes, we are questioning our meaning and value. In the novel Never Let me go, Kazuo Ishiguro tried to present the dystopian aspects of how the clones were stripped off of their identities. To a large extent, I think he can successfully achieve his purpose.
Kathy, Tommy and Ruth spent their first 16 years at Hailsham, an arcane boarding school that entirely secluded from the outside world. Living at Hailsham is like living in a prison──there were no televisions inside Hailsham, there was no one from the outside pay a visit to them, and there were rules that students could not defy. No one was courageous enough to walk out from Hailsham and no one was curious enough to ask guardians about the mysterious outside world. To us, their lives may sound perverted and tedious; but to Kathy, she
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For guardians, they paid their greatest effort in providing every student a fulfilled childhood. “The knowledge that we've given you better lives than you would have had otherwise(265).” They suggested the clones should be grateful for having more humane treatment; for students, they definitely wanted more than that. They had their own dreams, and they wanted to pursue them. They were reluctant to just provide vital organs that eventually consumes their lives. In the end, Kathy, Ruth and Tommy all made their organ donations, and died. However, I am wondering if Hailsham a dystopian society for clones or not. Even though, they knew they were copies, they are “human trash”, they never grudged or resent Hailsham. Before donation, Kathy reminisced the old days at Hailsham. “The memories I value most, I don't see them ever fading… I’ll have Hailsham with me, safety in the head(286).” Maybe Hailsham was not the place that stripped off their identities, it brought meaning and purpose for everyone of them