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Essay / Research Paper Abstract
This 5 page paper examines the novels The Rachel Papers and Never Let Me Go. The theme of adolescent privacy is addressed. Bibliography lists 3 sources.
Page Count:
5 pages (~225 words per page)
File: RG13_SA01118ra.doc
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Unformatted sample text from the term paper:
For example, television shows like Sister Wives demonstrate that the traditional nuclear family with two or three children, and a mother and a father, does not always exist. In the
family featured in that reality show, there are many children. It is hard it imagine that each one of them is provided personal space. As children develop into adolescents
they seem to need space in order to process their days, and make sense out of their new emotions and desires. In a science fiction book called Never Let Me
Go, the teenagers kept in a particular place are without their parents and were cloned for a special purpose. They are actually the things that people fear most, which is
that human beings will be used to simply grow organs for other people. Yet, in the context of this apocalyptic piece, one can see the human nature that seems to
take over. The children who grow into adolescents fall in love, something that makes things difficult for those running this project. Other authors tackle the notion of private space,
and the necessity for it, in another way. In The Rachel Papers, Martin Amis (2006) explores adolescence in a multidimensional manner. The characters are rather boisterous and entangled in
relationships. At the same time, they are private in their own way. They need their own space at times and this is best exemplified when it becomes clear that they
feel comfortable in their own bedrooms. In The Rachel Papers, according to Jo Croft (2006) "the narrators bedrooms are explicitly represented as constituents of their adolescents identities" (210). This observation
is quite rational. It is true that adolescents crave attention, but they are also in need of private reflection. This may be true even more for the adolescent than the
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