Saturday, May 30, 2015

Humanity's Evil Ridden Existance

Humanity’s Evil Ridden Existence
            Mankind have not always ‘played nice’ or been the best ‘sharers’.  What we find, we tend to keep and hold on to.  It’s our way of life and because we are simply animals, in Ishiguro’s world within Never Let Me Go, it demonstrates the ideal human existence.  By demonstrating the clones, he paints an unbiased image of what humanity is and what we are capable of because we were able to completely strip people to just our shells and in the end, butcher them for our glory.
            This novel is relatable to the Romans and in their Golden Age; thousands were massacred on the floor of the Colosseum, the prize of many emperors.  This was one of the things which humanity frowns upon as we reflect on our past but in all truth, our past is what makes our present.  By the blood of the thousands dead in the sand of sadistic glory driven killers, we learned how to cover up our evil urges and deeds by attempting to justify them to some degree.  After some saw through the emperor’s blood lust, Christians replaced the slaves in the arena.  Nero and many others claimed that they deserved to die because they were different.  In the animal kingdom, those who are too different are put to death at natures hand, whether she be swift through the claws of a predator or the creature’s same species.  Humans are the same.  Fate and Mother Nature play games with out lives and weave out a tapestry as the Greeks believed.  The three hags belonging to Fate weave, tie, and snip away our existence with each other.
            This concept of playing God and exposing what humans are really made of it prevalent in Never Let Me Go because of the environment Ishiguro places the characters in.  The setting of England has changed dramatically from what we see her as today, as any dystopian novel likes to play off of.  However, he brings forth a world that bares the fruit of humanity’s darker labors and exposes how much we try to cover up our lust for evil.  Our subconscious minds strive for what we presume as ‘good, what we have been trained to feel as good.  Inherently, we have lost what it means to be ‘good’ or ‘evil’.  Few have considered that one is actually both.
            Cloning and other activities in which the human race is destined to dabble in, creates a particular environment which nature had never intended.  The sole act of creating a genetically identical being to one already in existence is defying basic laws of nature and natural selection.  DNA is never meant to be repeated to the exact chromosome count and chemical makeup, nature has made that so.  However when Ishiguro brings in clones to a hurting world, similar to the fascist future that V frees England from in V for Vendetta, it opens up our darkest fears.  For it is no secret that we humans fear what we do not know and Never Let Me Go is something we all do fear.  Just thinking about the thought of having an extra body if yours should fail is not as paralyzing as one might wish to believe, already showing how numb we have become to valuing other life, but when that extra body reflects the ideals and experiences of another human being, we fear deeply.  These clones represent a mirror to the dirt of humanity’s soul and how far we can stretch our tricks, telling ourselves that we are really humane and understanding of life around us.  We fail to miss how we would hypothetically treat clones.  Already such treatment of other organisms is prevalent today in animal testing, where we shove down our comforts on innocent life around us.  The fact that these creatures cannot emote as we do allows us to tell ourselves that it is morally forgiven by our own ideal of mercy and justice.
            Just as V believed, chaos will open the eyes of Madame Justice when she has become infatuated with the diseased ideal of right and wrong.  Madame Justice’s statue and symbol is that of a woman, a fellow homo-sapien.  If we humans can personify such an ideal as justice in the form of a fellow human, does that imply that we believe that we have a structured concept of justice within our hearts or minds?  The hypothetical treatment of the clones is proof enough that we are incapable of stopping when enough is enough.  Hailsham’s existence was for those in charge to attempt to assure the world that these abominations, which we created, would be treated ‘humanely’.  According to the dictionary, the adjective humane means “having or showing benevolence or compassion” (dictionary.com) but in Never Let Me Go, “maybe the reason you used to [throw tantrums] like that was because at some level you always knew” (275) that things would never be as the authorities claimed they would be.
            “The fantasy never got beyond that-I didn’t let it-and though the tears rolled
            down my face, I wasn’t sobbing out of control.  I just waited a bit, then turned
            back to the car, to drive off to wherever it was I was supposed to be” (288 Never Let Me 
             Go).
            This quote is the last few sentences of the book and its significance is how it outlines the passion and passivity of these clones.  They became passive because of how badly they lost what it means to be ‘human’.  In a general sense, most of humanity today does not truly understand what it means ‘to be’.  We go through life as though it moves around us and we push through it like a thick fog.  Instead of pushing back at what we call life, we need to let it pass through us without loosing what it means to be active.  ‘To be’ is not just a verb, but also a way of life and describes the proper way to exist in a world where evil surrounds you.  Evil tempts you and promises the sweeter fruits from the tree of evil.  Though humans know that fruit may taste better, we failed to see how badly we would fall by sampling its deliciousness.
            A ‘clone’ by definition is “an organism or cell, or a group of organisms or cells, produced asexually from one ancestor or stock, to which they are genetically identical” (dictionary.com).  Really, they are just the shells of what we deem as proof of human existence.  We look at our own bodies and believe that there is something more than a brain, which dictates our lives and feelings inside.  We hope that there is more around us than really is and that is why science is the bane of our existence.  It is the bridge upwards and once you reach the top, do you see how far it plummets downwards into destruction and nothingness.
            Ishiguro reveals how science is believed to be humanity’s cure from death that we fear most, but instead reflects our true and deeper malignant nature.  We would so selflessly undermine another’s existence to preserve ourselves which returns to Darwin’s theory of natural selection and nature’s law.  Even in literature, we keep searching for monsters and explanations for what goes bump in the night.  Never Let Me Go gives us a flashlight in the dark and what we see staring back at us is ourselves.  We are the true monsters and we are the true evil of this world.
            V attempts to disregard the government who has reduced the inhabitants of England to passive and silent sheep.  The clones too were dehumanized to become animals that were eager to be herded and even at the end of the novel, Kathy was herded off to her presumed doom.
            Humanity’s fear creates a veil to attempt to shroud our deeper and subconscious desires for eternal life, youth, sex, and power.  To the core of our existence, we are reduced back to animals.   No matter how hard we try to shake what we really are, the three Fates will prevail.  Mother Nature places us all back to our most basic forms, just another organism trying to reproduce and compete for life.

            In the end, we are nothing more than our shadows and trickery.  V held a strong point, revealing to us that through our theatrics that we call daily life, there are no ideals left to guide our motives for freedom.  There shall always be evil but freedom is the path to open more eyes to the capabilities of our ‘humane’ society and it’s smoky mirrors.  The true strength behind our struggle against evil is the fact that “ideas are bulletproof” (V for Vendetta) and with ideas and with freedom in a little chaos, mankind might be able to amend our evil spark.

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