William Golding's Lord Of The Flies: An Analysis

Words: 1490
Pages: 6

The period of time between the 19th and 21st century oversaw the mass killing, genocide, and torture of many millions of innocent people by citizens of allegedly civilized nations. . Leaders such as the noble King Leopold II of Belgium, the fatherly Chairman Mao Zedong, and the stately Joseph Stalin are all responsible for the slaughter of millions. It may seem anomalous that noble people would be responsible for these events, however it is far from unnatural, and there is good reason why the history of civilized people has played out this way. The concepts of civilization and society are inherently unnatural; humankind was not built in such a way to be part of a large-scale, diverse, and organized society like the one we live in today. This artificial way of living has metamorphosed the natural, tribal, hunter-gatherer instincts of humans into the inhuman …show more content…
The book details the story of a group of young, British schoolboys stranded on a island, and left to their own devices to survive. Throughout the book, the futile attempts of the children to civilize themselves is rewarded by the brutal deaths of three of those children, as well as the destruction of vast amounts of valuable natural resources on the island. Through this, Golding illustrates how civilization and society, are not only the most unnatural ways of living possible for mankind, but, in fact, the root of much that society would consider evil. As illustrated Illustrated, as in Lord of the Flies, one boy, Jack, and his group of savages end up faring much better than another child, Ralph, and his attempt to civilize, Ralph even ends up destroying part of the island trying to achieve this goal; as well by the countless times that civility has been behind the most horrible events to ever take