Option Two – Theme or issue Never Let Me Go Brooklyn
At that moment, Eilis knows exactly who she is and where she must be. Unlike Kathy and the other children who are deeply shaken when confronted with their identity, Eilis is not shaken and distressed by her experience. She says proudly, ‘My name is Eilis Fiorello’, deciding at that moment to go back to America to be with Tony.
Despite their struggles to learn who they are and to find their place in the world, Kathy and her friends ultimately have to accept that no matter what they do in their short lives, the society in which they live will never see them as individuals or even human beings. Kathy realises this when she and Tommy visit Miss Emily to ask if they can be considered for a ‘deferral’. Miss Emily and Madame explain to the young couple that no matter how much in love they might be or how much they can display their humanity, the ‘normal’ people will always view them as less than human. However, despite the terrible fate that awaits her, Kathy refuses to sacrifice her own sense of self. She continues her relationship with Tommy and does not give up on life or love. At the end of the novel, Kathy is about to begin her donations and knows she will soon die. The novel is Kathy’s reflection on what has been important and valuable in her life: friendship, love and creativity. It is clear that in spite of what society thinks of her, Kathy is an individual who is sustained by her precious memories of all the experiences and relationships that have made her who she is.
Eilis is more successful than Kathy in establishing her identity and becoming a happy and fulfilled individual. Of course, Eilis has a chance of a future and a long and happy life, so she is not subjected to the same restrictions as Kathy. The only antagonistic force determined to deny Eilis her chance to be who she wants to be is Miss Kelly. However, Miss Kelly is nothing like as powerful as the entire society in Never Let Me Go. Eilis is more than strong enough to stand up to Miss Kelly and return to America to be with the man she loves.
As a result, the ending of the film is far more positive in terms of establishing the central character’s identity than the ending of the novel. Kathy is left with her treasured memories, which are some consolation, but Eilis’s situation if far more rewarding. Eilis has successfully become the person she wanted to be; the happy ending of the film convinces us that she has made the right decision and is living life on her own terms.
Philadelphia, Here I Come!
their identity and learned from them, Gar resists even his private self’s attempts to tell him the truth. In his conversation with Kate, Gar doubles down on his fantasies and becomes boastful and aggressive, announcing, ‘I’ll come home when I make my first million’, and saying that he hates everything about Ballybeg and can’t wait to be gone.
The endings of the texts show that each character has a different degree of success in establishing their own identity.
Gar is the least successful character in the three texts in terms of establishing his own identity. Unlike Kathy, whose sense of self is sustained by the memories of the relationships she has had in her short life, Gar is miserably aware that even his memories of his home will prove either false or painful and will contribute to his unrealistic and unsatisfactory sense of who he is. He knows, for example, that his time with his friends, the ‘ignorant bloody louts’, will be ‘distilled of all its coarseness’ until he is left with a fake memory akin to ‘precious, precious gold’.
At the very end of the play, Gar watches Madge ‘shuffle off’ and tells himself to note every detail carefully as this is ‘a film you’ll run over and over again’. This yearning contrasts with Gar’s inability to tell Madge how much he cares for her. Both examples show Gar’s unrealistic view of life; he persuades himself that he and his friends had only good times, and he makes Madge’s exit into a mental film he will cherish. This is a large part of the reason Gar will never have a consistent, strong vision of who he really is and where he belongs. In this respect, he is very different to Eilis, who sees that she needs to examine her home place and all its faults if she is to live an independent and fulfilled life. We suspect that Gar will be forever yearning for a different life and a version of himself that he believes he could have become were circumstances different.
Leaving Certificate English 395 Excellence in Texts
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