Analysis of Klara and the Sun From the Perspective of Defamilarization

Hui LIU, Ping YAN

Abstract


Klara and the Sun is a dystopian novel published by the British author Kazuo Ishiguro in 2017, which presents the defamiliarized narrative perspective of an android called Klara. Set somewhere in the near future, the story follows Klara’s perspective as an “Artificial Friend” to a young, sick girl who has had her genetics altered for better academic performance. On the basis of Victor Shklovsky’s theory of the defamiliarization, this paper analyzes the dilemma of the human existence, as well as the uniqueness and fragility of the human nature from Klara’s defamiliarized perspective, which reflects Ishiguro’s deep concerns about the human existence and the potential crisis of the human society.

 


Keywords


Kazuo Ishiguro; Klara and the Sun; Defamilarization; Artifacial intelligence

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References


Crawford, L. (1984). Viktor Shklovskij: Différance in defamiliarization. Comparative Literature, 36(3), 209–219.

Erlich, V. (1980). Russian formalism. The Hague: Mouton.

Ishiguro, K. (2021). Klara and the sun. London: Faber and Faber.

Margolin, U. (1994). Russian formalism. The Johns Hopkins University Press.

Mori, M., MacDorman, K. F., & Kageki, N. (2012). The uncanny valley [From the Field]. IEEE Robotics & Automation Magazine, 19(2), 98-100.

Shklovsky, V. (2015). Art, as device. Poetics Today, 36(3), 151-174.




DOI: http://dx.doi.org/10.3968/12377

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