angerball
Active Member
Nice sarcasm.ions said:Apparently you're not familiar with organ donor waiting lists?
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Nice sarcasm.ions said:Apparently you're not familiar with organ donor waiting lists?
The way I saw it was that rich people were cloned and when they needed organs, the clones were there to give up their organs. I thought that the carers were just those clones whose "original copy" had no need for the organs as of yet. This would explain the rumor about each student having a double on the outside, but I'm probably wrong anywaysangerball said:Nice sarcasm.Of course I'm familiar with organ donor waiting lists.
What I was saying, is that in the book, there seems to be a large number of "donors" - far more than would be required (as well as counting the "regular people" who are listed as organ donors). Otherwise, why would there be some clones that weren't "donors", but "carers"? Why not use "regular people" as carers, and use all the clones as "donors"?
angerball said:Nice sarcasm.Of course I'm familiar with organ donor waiting lists.
What I was saying, is that in the book, there seems to be a large number of "donors" - far more than would be required (as well as counting the "regular people" who are listed as organ donors). Otherwise, why would there be some clones that weren't "donors", but "carers"? Why not use "regular people" as carers, and use all the clones as "donors"?
ions said:To furhter beat the dead horse named "look at how terrible man can be".
ions said:If memory serves carers eventually become donors. I can't recall if it was said if there were exceptions to that rule. I would imagine carers were not regular people to further emphasize the seperation put on the organ donor folks over the regular folks. To furhter beat the dead horse named "look at how terrible man can be".
Shade said:I don't think it's really about that at all. It's no more a tale of moral angst than it is a sci-fi novel. The focus for me was on the way the clones/donors react to their situation, ie limited opposition, general acceptance, no sense that things should be or could be any way other than they are: representative, in other words, of all humans and their general failure to rage against the dying of the light or to want to break free from their limited lives.
Peder I've been following this discussion as well, and it seems that for the larger part it is the 'doners' that are being critized for not railing against their fate, and not rising up in revolt. What about the ones that caused, and started this system? They're the ones that deserve to be hung.Peder said:Is it really so clear that it is the donors who deserve the criticism of the narrator, or the reader, rather than the people who got the donors into their predicament? There are certainly two parties, or more, to the situation and criticizing the donors sounds to me at least a little like blaming the victims moreso than the perpetrators.
Baffled a little,
Peder
Steffee,steffee said:Peder, do you mean the teachers at the school, those who decided that people would be cloned in order to satisfy donor requirements, or the people who the Hailsham students were molded from (sorry, I've forgotten the name Ishiguro gave them)?
steffee said:she talks of "they" thinking she's a good carer, etc, but who "they" are are never mentioned. It's hard to feel anything for that type of non-existant behind-the-scenes character, then. The teachers, and Madame, we do get to understand and empathise with, I thought.
Peder said:an outsider like myself stands little chance of appreciating its true flavor or its true meaning from a second-hand perspective. So you have given me a good reason to stop trying.