Auf ein Miniaturbild klicken, um zu Google Books zu gelangen.
Lädt ... Klara and the Sun: A novel (2021. Auflage)von Kazuo Ishiguro (Autor)
Werk-InformationenKlara und die Sonne von Kazuo Ishiguro
» 28 mehr Books Read in 2023 (182) Books Read in 2022 (292) Best Family Stories (238) Wishlist (3) Book Club 2022 (1) READ IN 2021 (161) Obama Reads (10) KayStJ's to-read list (1,422) Lädt ...
Melde dich bei LibraryThing an um herauszufinden, ob du dieses Buch mögen würdest.
Klara ist eine KI, ein artificial friend. Aus ihrer Sicht ist das Buch geschrieben. Ich fand es interessant. ( )
In de licht dystopische roman voert Ishiguro een balanseer act uit op de rand van kitch. Hij slaagt er echter op een uitzonderlijke wijze in om in evenwicht te blijven. Klara en de zon is een zeer geslaagde, enigszins verontrustende en gelaagde nieuwe roman van de meesterverteller en Nobelprijswinnaar…lees verder> Most of Ishiguro’s novels are slender books that are more complicated than they at first seem; Klara and the Sun is by contrast more simple than it seems, less novel than parable. Though much is familiar here—the restrained language, the under-stated first-person narration—the new book is much more overt than its predecessors about its concerns.... Ishiguro is unsentimental—indeed, one of the prevailing criticisms of him is that he’s too cold, his novels overly designed, his language detached. (Some of the worst writing on Ishiguro ascribes this to his being Japanese, overlooking that he’s lived in England since he was a small child.) In most hands, this business of the mother-figure who sacrifices all for a child would be mawkish. Here it barely seems like metaphor. Every parent has at times felt like an automaton. Every parent has pleaded with some deity for the safety of their child. Every parent is aware of their own, inevitable obsolescence. And no child can offer more than Josie’s glib goodbye, though perhaps Ishiguro wants to; the book is dedicated to his mother. It explores many of the subjects that fill our news feeds, from artificial intelligence to meritocracy. Yet its real political power lies not in these topical references but in its quietly eviscerating treatment of love. Through Klara, Josie, and Chrissie, Ishiguro shows how care is often intertwined with exploitation, how love is often grounded in selfishness ... this book focuses on those we exploit primarily for emotional labor and care work—a timely commentary during a pandemic in which the essential workers who care for us are too often treated as disposable ... If Never Let Me Go demonstrates how easily we can exploit those we never have to see, Klara and the Sun shows how easily we can exploit even those we claim to love ... a story as much about our own world as about any imagined future, and it reminds us that violence and dehumanization can also come wrapped in the guise of love. ... the real power of this novel: Ishiguro’s ability to embrace a whole web of moral concerns about how we navigate technological advancements, environmental degradation and economic challenges even while dealing with the unalterable fact that we still die.... tales of sensitive robots determined to help us survive our self-destructive impulses are not unknown in the canon of science fiction. But Ishiguro brings to this poignant subgenre a uniquely elegant style and flawless control of dramatic pacing. In his telling, Klara’s self-abnegation feels both ennobling and tragic. Critics often note Ishiguro’s use of dramatic irony, which allows readers to know more than his characters do. And it can seem as if his narrators fail to grasp the enormity of the injustices whose details they so meticulously describe. But I don’t believe that his characters suffer from limited consciousness. I think they have dignity. Confronted by a complete indifference to their humanity, they choose stoicism over complaint. We think we grieve for them more than they grieve for themselves, but more heartbreaking is the possibility that they’re not sure we differ enough from their overlords to understand their true sorrow. And maybe we don’t, and maybe we can’t. Maybe that’s the real irony, the way Ishiguro sticks in the shiv.... In Klara and the Sun, Ishiguro leaves us suspended over a rift in the presumptive order of things. Whose consciousness is limited, ours or a machine’s? Whose love is more true? If we ever do give robots the power to feel the beauty and anguish of the world we bring them into, will they murder us for it or lead us toward the light? Ist enthalten inAuszeichnungenPrestigeträchtige AuswahlenBemerkenswerte Listen
Der neue Roman des Nobelpreistr©Þgers Klara ist eine k©ơnstliche Intelligenz, entwickelt, um Jugendlichen eine Gef©Þhrtin zu sein auf dem Weg ins Erwachsenwerden. Vom Schaufenster eines Spielzeuggesch©Þfts aus beobachtet sie genau, was drau©en vor sich geht, studiert das Verhalten der Kundinnen und Kunden und hofft, bald von einem jungen Menschen als neue Freundin ausgew©Þhlt zu werden. Als sich ihr Wunsch endlich erf©ơllt und ein M©Þdchen sie mit nach Hause nimmt, muss sie jedoch bald feststellen, dass sie auf die Versprechen von Menschen nicht allzu viel geben sollte. KLARA UND DIE SONNE ist ein beeindruckendes, ber©ơhrendes Buch und Klara eine unvergessliche Erz©Þhlerin, deren Blick auf unsere Welt die fundamentale Frage aufwirft, was es hei©t zu lieben. Keine Bibliotheksbeschreibungen gefunden. |
Aktuelle DiskussionenKeineBeliebte Umschlagbilder
Google Books — Lädt ... GenresMelvil Decimal System (DDC)823.914Literature English English fiction Modern Period 1901-1999 1945-1999Klassifikation der Library of Congress [LCC] (USA)BewertungDurchschnitt:
Bist das du?Werde ein LibraryThing-Autor. |