Abstract:As a famous novelist in contemporary Britain, Kazuo Ishiguro shows much concern for the traumatic experience and tragic fate of humans. Never Let Me Go, a science fiction with a deep realistic significance, in which Kazuo Ishiguro has depicted imaginatively the complex emotions expressed by the cloned community living in the modern society when they are faced with life and responsibility. Their life experiences, as a mirror reflecting human survivals in today’s world, reveal the crisis and anxiety caused by science and technology. Drawing upon neo-slave narrative, blank narrative and “bystander effect”, Ishiguro thoroughly demonstrates the traumatic aesthetics integrating trauma, solemnity and aesthetic with his detailed analysis of the invisible, unspeakable and helpless spiritual trauma suffered by the clones.