A Pale View of Hills (1982), Kazuo Ishiguro’s debut novel explores the fractured memories of Etsuko, a Japanese woman in her middle age who moved to England from Nagasaki after divorcing her first husband. Ishiguro skillfully uses narrative unreliability to discover how memory and trauma intersect, shaping the psyche of individuals navigating multicultural environments, as portrayed through Etsuko. Throughout the novel, Etsuko’s life is haunted by trauma, manifesting in visions of her past that are clouded by delusions and sadness. This leads Etsuko to construct a personal truth that may diverge from objective reality. Her quest for self-discovery in the story reveals her shortcomings and disillusioned perspectives on life. This paper analyses how deeply traumatic events and memories affect the perceptions and interpretations of reality. It explores how Ishiguro uses Etsuko’s narrative to illustrate the ways in which trauma distorts and reshapes personal memories, influencing one’s understanding of their own history and identity.
Anusuya et al. (Tue,) studied this question.