Abstract

KazuoIshiguro's (2005) dystopian novelNeverLetMeGois set in 1990sBritain, in a boarding school calledHailsham. Through the adult voice of one of the children remembering her time growing up there, the reader gradually learns thatKathy and her friends have been raised as artificially‐generated clones, manufactured to provide body parts for ‘normals’ in the world. The narrative deploys flashback and hindsight in order to interrogate the essentialism of biological origins, raising complex questions concerning the relationship between memory, copying, creativity and selfhood. These topics are discussed through a psychoanalytic reading ofIshiguro's novel where I draw onApter's (2011) ideas about textual translation,Laplanche's (1999) notion of ‘afterwardsness’ and clinical material to explore the various ways in which memory and identification are implicated in the development of personal identity.

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