The Not-So Austen Bookclub discussion

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Perfect Ruin
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Perfect Ruin - April BOTM Discussion
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It is sort of. I mean it could represent our own comfort circles and how we ourselves tend to reject anything that stands outside it. (view spoiler)
@Inno: I agree with your idea. The rejection of 'otherness' or the unknown - things outside our comfort zone - is definitely a trait/quality that society has in abundance. Yet it's often not the rejection, but the fear that instigates/is behind the rejection, that is the issue.
'The edge' in a way represents that lingering fear in the back of peoples' minds - the fear of knowledge, of change. Those who are willing to look past this fear are changed...for the better, or for the worse, that remains to be seen. They are shunned by the others because they represent change, and this causes fear.
'The edge' in a way represents that lingering fear in the back of peoples' minds - the fear of knowledge, of change. Those who are willing to look past this fear are changed...for the better, or for the worse, that remains to be seen. They are shunned by the others because they represent change, and this causes fear.
The question to think about is:
What do you think 'the edge' of Internment is a metaphor of in today's society?
Feel free to extend the discussion beyond the questions and simply talk about the book as well :D