Abstract
Ishiguro has been preoccupied with memory since his earliest novel. How we remember and what we choose to remember have frequently been key considerations in his oeuvre. Ishiguro, in an interview during the publication of When We Were Orphans, stated that nostalgia, in its purest form, “is to the emotions what idealism is to the intellect”, that it is a way of “longing for a better world”. Unlike many writers and critics who tend to view nostalgia as a negative trait, Ishiguro chooses to view it positively, utilising nostalgia as a key element in his work that is evident in his novels, short fiction and screenplays. Paul Ricoeur was a key figure in 20th century continental philosophy who maintained a strong interest in the field of literature. He had been preoccupied with the themes of memory, forgetting and recognition toward the end of his life, particularly in the different ways in which we remember and forget key events, how we recognise different versions of ourselves, and how as social beings we receive mutual recognition from within a community. Utilising various aspects of Ricoeur’s theories, this chapter examines the themes of memory, nostalgia and recognition across a selection of Ishiguro’s writing, demonstrating the uniquely profound and elegiac nature of his work