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Introduction and Background

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1 Introduction and Background
Lord of the Flies 1954 Introduction and Background

2 Title Translation “Beelzebub” a Hebrew word for LUCIFER
However, the literal translation of “Beelzebub” into English is LORD OF THE FLIES

3 William Golding Born in Britain 1911-1993

4 In the decade before LOTF was published, Britain had been involved in two wars:
WWII Korean War

5 As a child, Golding had witnessed WWI, which was referred to as “the war to end all wars”
HOWEVER, 22 years later Britain was again involved in ANOTHER WAR to end all wars, which caused more devastation than was imaginable

6 Golding joined the Royal Navy in 1940 and spent six years afloat.
He was present off the French coast for the D-Day invasion, and later at the island of Walcheren. He witnessed firsthand the terrible destructive power of man operating during war, essentially outside the restrictive limits of society. With war as his tutor, he began to view man, instead, as a creature with a very dark and evil side to his nature.

7 Golding believed that our humanity rests in the capacity
to make value judgments and the power to decide this is right, that wrong, this ugly, that beautiful, this just, that unjust. After the war, he no longer believed in the inherent innocence and goodness of mankind. Golding once said that “man produces evil as a bee produces honey”.

8 “My yesterdays walk with me
“My yesterdays walk with me. They keep step, they are gray faces that peer over my shoulder.” (William Golding)

9 Two Concepts of Man (1) At the time of the writing of Coral Island, many believed in the “Romantic Concept of Man”: that man is born in innocence but it corrupted by an evil environment. At this time (the 19th century), it was commonly believed that British boys, like British men, would always behave well, no matter what crisis they were facing. The boys in Coral Island (Ralph, Jack, and Peter) stranded on the island, triumphed over the adversity facing them and even converted some of the natives to Christianity.

10 (2) Theory of Original Sin:
Although he used the basic plot of Coral Island, in Lord of the Flies, Golding went further in his analysis of good and evil in mankind. He revealed his concept of the essential nature of man. The boys are presented as typical of human nature. Ie. Man is born as a neutral creature, a creature who can be either good or evil according to the circumstances of his life. He does have the capacity for “evil” (something universally condemned such as murder). In Golding’s novels, man has free will: the choice to do good or to do evil. Because of our inborn tendency to do evil, we find it easier to do evil than to do good, and we don’t exercise our right to choose good as often as we might.

11 Issues dealt with in the novel:
THEMES AND IDEAS IN Lord of the Flies The theme [of Lord of the Flies] is an attempt to trace the defects of society back to the defects of human nature. The moral is that the shape of a society must depend on the ethical nature of the individual and not on any political system however apparently logical or respectable – William Golding Issues dealt with in the novel: Good and evil – human nature The need for civilization Innocence and the loss of innocence Illusion and reality Power Fear of the unknown The indifference of nature Blindness and vision Leaders and followers Survival

12 Through LOTF, Golding is making the statement that we cannot escape our savage, violent tendencies…

13 …and without social order, we devolve into a state of chaos

14 LOTF Symbols (Objects, characters, figures, or colors that represent ideas or concepts)
Piggy’s Glasses = The last surviving evidence of the lawful, structured world Conch Shell = New democracy on the island Snake = Evil…reference to the serpent in the garden of Eden

15 Important Images The Beast = The imaginary evil that is projected onto the island by the boys’ paranoia Lord of the Flies = A pig’s head on a stick that becomes the physical acceptance of evil on the island

16 TERMS to REMEMBER Microcosm = A small world that represents the world at large Edenic = Eden like, paradise like, a setting that has not yet been spoiled by man

17 Character Analysis Ralph ~ Main character described as “fair haired,” having “broad shoulders…[like a] boxer’s,” and has a face that “proclaims no devil” Committed to civilization and morality Translation = GOOD

18 Character Analysis Piggy \ Described as “fat,” “intellectual,” asthmatic, and needs glasses Represents scientific, rational side of civilization, and social order

19 Character Analysis Jack ~ Described as having red hair, wears black with a snake clasp, ugly Cruel and manipulative Represents our savage instincts played out EVIL

20 Character Analysis Simon ~ Described as a skinny, vivid little boy, who “meditates;” and he faints, which some cultures have believed is a sign of connecting with the spiritual world Seems to be connected with nature, and he has an innate, spiritual goodness

21 Character Analysis Roger ~ “Silent” and sadistic
Targets the “littluns” The only one to premeditate murder Kills without conscience Pure evil

22 Character Analysis Sam and Eric (Samneric) ~ Twins
Described as barely having enough skin to cover both, bullet-headed, and they finish each other’s sentences The last to remain loyal to Ralph Represent the tug-of-war within us to remain good

23 Character Analysis “Littluns” ~ The younger kids
Represent the common folk, who easily follow the lead of others into savagery when there is no enforced structure in society


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