Lord Of The Flies Setting Analysis

Words: 828
Pages: 4

Man has always been violent, starting with cavemen that use to fight over food and would beat each other to death, all the way to today’s wars that are over pride and people do very violent things in these wars. In the novel Lord of the flies by Golding there is a group of boys that get stranded on an island, the reason they get shot down onto the island in the first place is because of a violent war. The boys also become more violent and savage the more time they spend on the island. Throughout the novel Golding creates a world of increasing violence through the characters, the setting, and the events of the novel. When the boys first arrive on the island they all are very civilized and were used to having rules and also being moral. As …show more content…
One example of Golding using the setting to show violence is when he explains the forest “Their only guide, apart from the brown ground and the occasional flashes of light through the foliage, was the tendency of slope”(Golding 26). This part of the novel is showing how creepy the forests is and the mood it sets. The forest becomes a part of the island that the littluns or the younger kids become scared of because they say that they see something in the forest. Another example of Golding using the setting to help had to the violence of the novel is when one of the boys says “He says the beast comes out of the sea”(Golding 88). This added a new fear for the boys making then act more scared than they already were. Jack said that he wasn’t scared and he was ready to kill it, this added to Jack’s already violent way of thinking. The island and also the things on the island help create a violent mood for the …show more content…
One example of an event that shows violence in the book is when “ Simon’s dead body moved out toward the open sea”(Golding 154), Simon was coming out of the forest and the boys attacked him, thinking he was the beast but the boys were already hyped up and acting violent. They killed him and did not think twice about it, there were acting savage and the violence overtook their heads. Another example of Golding using events in the book to show the violence is when the boys also kill piggy, “ The rock struck Piggy a glancing blow from chin to knee; the conch exploded into a thousand white fragments and ceased to exist”(Golding 181). Roger launched the rock and killed Piggy, the violence kept going until they killed two people. At the end of the book then end up hunting Ralph, another boy that was on the island and the only reason they did not kill him was because a group on rescue men can and found them before it was too