At the beginning of Lord of the Flies Ralph and Jack are competing for the role of leader. They go about this in very different ways like how Ralph tries to convince them about what needs to get done and how they should be doing things. While on the other hand Jack tries to gain the affections of the group by letting them do whatever they want whenever, and giving the meaty nutrition (69). Ralph has a lot of good leadership qualities like being able to take input from teammates like Piggy, and how he focuses on the immediate problem at hand (42). Jack has good leadership qualities as well like how he is willing to let them have fun, and how he organizes the hunts (51). Thought they both have admirable leadership qualities I believe the better leader of the two is Ralph.…
Stephen Crane’s short stories, The Red Badge of Courage and The Outcasts of Poker Flat, show how the environment shapes a person’s beliefs and actions. In The Red Badge of Courage, Henry Fleming is transformed by the war that surrounds him. As Henry goes through the realities of war, watching many of his friends die, he matures and realizes that the “red badge” is not everything he imagined it to be. In The Outcasts of Poker Flat, The Duchess is transformed when Tom Simpson and Piney Woods arrive in town. The love the Duchess feels towards Piney transforms her from being just the prostitute to being just as innocent as Piney. In Stephen Crane’s short stories, The Red Badge of Courage and The Outcasts of Poker Flat, Henry Fleming changes ____________…
Power is a dangerous entity to search for carelessly, and that’s exactly what Willie Stark of All The King’s Men (by Robert Penn Warren) did. Willie tried to breeze through his election run without a worry by blackmail and deception. In his search for power Willie started as a clean candidate for governor, looking to help the people and rid them of corruption. Along his path that’s not what he does instead he becomes a corrupt leader that gets himself killed by making too many enemies. Willie’s search for power lead him to become the exact opposite he promised to get rid of.…
Malcolm Gladwell presents his thesis of small tipping points to a bigger problem in the very title of the book. Within the first chapter, he introduces the simple idea that there are three simple “tipping points” that causes a large problem. From there, he elaborates on his different causes in a full chapter with other examples to help prove his point. Gladwell uses plenty of examples that the general population could pull from memory easily and then proceeds to use these examples to make more challenging ideas easier to understand. For example, Gladwell uses the famous Paul Revere ride within the second chapter, explaining the importance in a word of mouth epidemic (Gladwell). Through the example of Paul Revere and his famous word of mouth…
Throughout the boys all showed how they responded to change/challenges in different ways. Specifically Jack & Ralph, they responded to challenges in very different ways. We being stuck on the island and having to choose a leader Jack displayed a very dictatorship style of leadership while Ralph displayed a style similar to a democracy. Although their main objective of escaping the island was wanted by both parties, they had a conflict of main goals which was for Jack was surviving and eventually escaping the island by the help of his father a marine. An Individual’s responses to change differ, some may remain logical while other may rely on their primal instincts.…
1. The conch being inexpertly blown and the fact that Piggy has only one lens shows that society has begun to function poorly. The reason for this decline in society is Jack. Jack broke Piggy's lens, and now Jack who has power, represented by the conch, does not know how to blow it properly. This tells us that Jack is an inept leader who misuses power and destroys knowledge. To become an expert at something, such as blowing a conch or leading a society takes time, so this is also significant because it shows that Jack has just recently come to power. Because the conch and Piggy's glasses are crippled, knowledge and power are crippled, but not yet fully eliminated.<br><br>2. When Simon says, " I think we ought to climb the mountain.", he means…
During chapters 9-12, Ralph and Jack reach their utter desperation point which results in them trying to kill each other to again their pride and power back. Towards the end of the book Jack became extremely dangerous and aggressive due to the lack of civilization. "Jack made a rush and stabbed Ralph's chest with his spear," (Pg 177). Throughout the fight for pride and power at the end of the book, Jack is determined to prove his strength and bravery by trying to kill Ralph. I believe he does this for two reasons; because of his utter hate and disregard for Ralph and how he treated him like a child and how he needed to prove that Ralph was weak to the other boys on the island. The lack of rules, orders and regulations caused Jack to think there were no laws to…
William Golding’s novel Lord of the Flies is the story of a group of English school boys who crashed-landed on a deserted island and have to survive on their own. There are many characters who change throughout the course of the story, for example, characters like Simon and Piggy continued to gain confidence throughout the novel. Although all the boys go through character changes as a result of being taken away from the strict structure of English society, the character of Jack changes most through the course of the novel from the leader of the choir to a somewhat savage leader.…
“All the King’s Men” written by author Robert Penn Warren, takes place in a society with declining morals in 1939 and published 1946. The novel is about a man, Jack Burden, the protagonist and becomes Willie’s “right-hand-man” in doing whatever Willie wants and gets information on others that Willie feels threatened by and uses that information to blackmail people. Other than the corruption that Jack Burden does for Willie, as a reader you are able to see that Jack Burden is a good character who is learning from his surroundings becoming a more wise and moral character. In the beginning of the novel, Jack Burden contains childlike qualities. He believes that Willie is protecting him because Willie and Judge Irwin are the father figure in his life. When Jack realizes that Willie isn’t the right father figure in his life is when Jack gains wisdom and realizes his mistakes and starts to become a man. Closer to the end of the novel when Jack has his realization is when he starts taking responsibility and leaving his Great Twitch idea, that no one person can take the consequences of a single action, he does this by taking responsibility for himself and others. Jack heals from his past hurts to become a better man and develop the morals that their society desperately needs to push through and get rid of all the corruption that Willie Stark brings to their society.…
I will look at both qualified peoples as well as those who write books. I will give you a few theories to whet your appetite.…
In William Golding's, ‘Lord of the Flies’ there is a constant leadership struggle between Ralph and Jack. Ralph has proven himself to be the better leader of the two, by keeping his focus on keeping the signal fire going and building shelter, and maintaining some type of society and rule. Jack’s leadership style was militaristic, making others follow him by making them fear him. He was much more preoccupied with hunting and “The Beast” rather than getting rescued.…
In his novel, The Chrysalids, John Wyndham argues that in order to evolve, society must accept change. He does this by presenting the ideas: it’s destructive when society doesn’t change, society stagnates when it doesn’t change and differences are strengths. The book is set in a post nuclear war era and is about a boy called David who lives in a community of religious and genetic fundamentalists who are constantly on alert for any mutations. At first he doesn’t think much of their values but as the story progresses he realises that his gift of telepathy could doom him and his friends.…
Fahrenheit 451 is a novel written by Ray Bradbury exploring the effects of a simplistic society devoid of free thinking and reliant on cheap satisfactions. The story follows a fireman whose job is to burn books and put an end to the sharing of knowledge. The novel reveals the psyche of many of its characters, and also the author. Psychoanalytic theory was created by Sigmund Freud, a famous Austrian psychologist. It is a theory used to explain human behaviour. Psychoanalytic theory states that the id, the ego, and the superego make up the human personality. The id represents the instinctual drive for instant satisfactions. The job of the ego is to fulfill the demands of the id in a safe and socially acceptable way while also considering the ideals of the super ego. The super ego is comprised of the idealistic goals and ideal self one wishes to accomplish. It strives for perfection and morality. In addition, Freud used defence mechanisms such as repression to explain how people cope with difficult emotions. Sigmund Freud’s theories and ideologies can be used to analyse people and literature in order to uncover secrets about the psyche.…
Throughout life there are moments where an individual must conform to society and the people around them in order to be accepted, however it is the individual actions and how the individual chooses to conform that creates their unique identity and place within that society. Ralph Ellison published the novel that follows a sense of outward conformity and obedience to an established order while at the same time invoking an inward questioning of the roles an individual plays within such an order. The main character is forced to conform to the cliché laws and expectations of the laws and expectations of the society that he lives in, in order to survive and function within them, while he privately goes against these societies in order to define themselves as individuals and uncover the truth about those societies that they live in. The outward conformity and inward questioning constantly clash, causing the character to doubt and confuse with what he knows is the truth and what he wants to believe is the truth.…
Contrary to popular belief, ignorance is not, in any shape or form, ‘bliss’, however it is not restricting either. No one can truly live in a constant state of ignorance, because just as time heals all wounds, time also inflicts them. Sometimes not knowing is antagonizing than knowing. However, knowledge can place a person in a situation where they feel that they have no other option but to perform an act of some kind. In the Shakespearean play “Hamlet”, the main character’s, Prince Hamlet, revelations of the sins committed by his uncle, Claudius, adds to the tension that already existed between the two and is the catalyst to the tragic events that take place within the play. The grievances that Hamlet had against his Claudius, now his step-father and King, is the murder of his father, the theft of his crown and Claudius’ hasty marriage of his mother and queen, Gertrude.…