Piggy the tritagonist in the novel “The Lord of the Flies”, has a name that has many different meanings. The most stereotypical and assumed meaning of his name would be “fat” or “obese”and it is known that many people who are obese or fat in books are usually discriminated against. His name gives insight into his character since his character is left out a lot. An example of Piggy feeling left out is when Jack says “Shut up.”(Golding 11) and does not allow him to talk. This makes him feel powerless and unworthy to be in their society. This also occurs in other books such as “Freak the Mighty”. Freak the Mighty are discriminated against because of their disabilities and the way the look. They are considered to be outcasts just as Piggy is.…
Piggy is one of the main characters in the book Lord of the Flies and despite his physical health and inability to swim, he is an important character that greatly affects Ralph and Jack's decisions due to his intelligence. Near the beginning of the book, you quickly learn that Piggy is a plump boy that has asthma and has been wearing specs since he was three. You can also tell that Piggy is a friendly person because…
The opening character is important and effective because it sets the scene for that character, and their situation. You can almost predict what that character will be like in the rest of the book by the few sentences that the author gives you. The opening character is also a vital piece of information, because it will make the reader want to read on. The first character that was introduced was Ralph. We can predict that he will become important in the rest of the book because he is the first on the island, and he removes his clothes, which is the first symbol of rebellion.…
In the novel Lord of the Flies William Golding shows multiple times in the book how piggy is represented as the intelligence of the group. This quote is showing how piggy is trying to get organization in the group by finding and name the conch, “That’s what this shells called. I’ll give the conch to the next person to speak. He can hold it when he’s speaking.”(pg.33) This next quote piggy is showing how when piggy wears his glasses intelligence and knowing there stuck on an island and nobody knows, Piggy put on his glasses. “Nobody knows where we are.” (pg.34) This quote shows how intelligence is weakened when one of piggy’s glasses lens is broken by Jack, Jack smacked Piggy’s head. Piggy’s glasses flew off and tinkled on the rocks, Piggy cried out in terror: “My specs!”(pg.71)…
I met Ralph today. He seemed like a nice person so I told him my nickname was Piggy when I was back home. We went down to the beach together and found a shell on the beach. We used it to make a trumpet which called the rest of the boys down from the woods to the beach. This is where things went bad, Ralph apparently doesn't keep secrets too well. Ralph told everyone that my nickname was Piggy. They haven't let up on the name either everybody thinks that it's so funny to call me that. It doesn’t trouble me too much but I’d rather them not call me by that name.…
At this point in the novel, the group of boys has lived on the island for some time, and their society increasingly resembles a political state. Although the issue of power and control is central to the boys’ lives from the moment they elect a leader in the first chapter, the dynamics of the society they form take time to develop. By this chapter, the boys’ community mirrors a political society, with the faceless and frightened littluns resembling the masses of common people and the various older boys filling positions of power and importance with regard to these underlings. Some of the older boys, including Ralph and especially Simon, are kind to the littluns; others, including Roger and Jack, are cruel to them. In short, two conceptions of power emerge on the island, corresponding to the novel’s philosophical poles—civilization and savagery. Simon, Ralph, and Piggy represent the idea that power should be used for the good of the group and the protection of the littluns—a stance representing the instinct toward civilization, order, and morality. Roger and Jack represent the idea that power should enable those who hold it to gratify their own desires and act on their impulses, treating the littluns as servants or objects for their own amusement—a stance representing the instinct toward savagery.…
In the beginning of the book, (Pos. 7-9) Ralph and piggy don't even know each other and are the only ones, that they know of, who are on the island. (Pos. 65) Ralph and Piggy seem to be more associated with each other. They also share ideas with each other and see what the other one thinks of his idea. (Pg. 88-89) Ralph and Piggy both agree that there probably isn't a beast unlike everyone else is thinking, so this means that they have something in common. (Pg. 125) Ralph thinks he saw the beast and it describing it to Piggy who doesn't want to believe that there is an actual beast, but since it is coming from Ralph he kind of excepts the idea. If one of the other boys would have said the same thing to Piggy, Piggy probably wouldn't even try…
Throughout the novel Lord of the Flies the character Piggy was often looked as the overweight, four-eyed, physically unfit member of the group that had no value other than as punching bag. Rather than being a valued member of the group, Piggy was often taken advantage of and all of his ideas were shadowed by the fact that he was overweight. Piggy's ideas were often overlooked by the fact that he was overweight despite that many of his ideas would bring great benefit to the group. For example, Piggy brought up that it would e a good idea to make a sundial. The boys dismissed this idea right away and told him to “shut up, fatty!” (page number). Piggy’s idea could have led the boys to record the times that they saw ships pass by so they know when…
In contrast to the violent Jack and charismatic Ralph, Piggy is immediately established as the intellectual of the group. Although he is physically inept, clumsy, and asthmatic, he has a rational mind and the best grasp of their situation. It is his knowledge of the conch shell that allows Ralph to summon the rest of the boys together and he who shows the most concern for some sort of established order in meetings and in day-to-day life. He has a particular interest in names, immediately asking Ralph for his and wishing that Ralph would reciprocate the question, as well as insisting that a list of names be taken when the boys assemble. This emphasis on naming is one of the first indications of the imposition of an ordered society on the island (it also recalls the naming of the animals in Genesis). For Piggy, names not only facilitate organization and communication but also mark one's position within a social hierarchy. It is significant that Piggy is forced by the others to keep his despised nickname from home, which re-inscribes his inferior social status from the Home Counties in the new dynamic of the island. We may also note that Piggy's name symbolically connects him to the pigs on the island, which in subsequent chapters become the targets of many of the boys' unrestrained violent impulses. As the boys turn their rage against the pigs, Golding foreshadows Piggy's own murder at the close of the novel.…
Piggy is one of the main characters as well as one of the first characters we, the readers, meet. He is characterized by his glasses, asthma, and a level of decorum that direct decorum that any stereotypical Brit could envy. Within their community, he is seen as the voice of reason(see: direct). This makes his character particularly important as he is surrounded by other boys who would rather treat their crisis as a playground. However, this cynicism, on a deeper level, can be seen as a method of deflecting and a power play. On page 46, he looks upon the others with disdain as they rush up the mountain to start the fire. This separates him from the other boys, in case something goes wrong. And, of course, it does. Towards the end of chapter two, as the mountain is burning, Piggy scolds them for both not thinking, but also(and more importantly) not listening to him in the first place. These actions enable Piggy to pass the blame to everyone else and thus, allowing him to walk away with a free conscience even though their main hope for food just burnt and one of their own might be dead.…
Piggy is a corpulent boy with glasses and gets picked on by the other boys on the island and is ignored. Piggy always getting picked on and getting his glasses ripped off his face causes him to think as an individual. Piggy is a wise boy and wants his voice to be heard by the other boys on the island so he uses the conch throughout the book so they would listen to him no matter what. “I got the conch, I got the conch,…
As Atticus said, “it's a sin to kill a mockingbird”, because they have done nothing to anyone but try to please. There are many people in the world and in stories that symbolize mockingbirds, that were killed innocently. There are not many mockingbirds in Maycomb County, but until Boo Radley showed up no one knew that he was a true mockingbird. Mockingbirds do nothing but try to please humans by singing, and try to help. In the book To Kill a Mockingbird, Scout goes through many hard times and learns what it is to be like a mockingbird, innocent. In the end of the book, she realizes Boo Radley is a mockingbird, just like the gray ghost, a character in a book Scout and Atticus read. Innocent.…
I am stranded on a desert island with a group of rude and immature boys, and no responsible human being knows I am here. The atmosphere of the island is not very good for my asthma. It is hot and humid, so it's hard to breathe, and I can't even go swimming to cool off, because my Auntie says I can't on account of my asthma. The first boy I met on this island was Ralph, who seems completely disinterested in everything I say. The only thing that caught his interest was when I told him of my loathed nickname, "Piggy." After I warned him that I didn't want people to call me that, he went and blurted it out to the other boys, and since then I have been mocked and tormented to no end. Ralph used the conch that I found to gather all the boys together, and he was appointed leader. Whoever wants to speak has to hold the conch, but whenever I am holding the conch, Jack interrupts me and sometimes he even makes fun of me. If Auntie was here, none of this would be happening; she would take care of me and give me all the sweets I desire. For now, Journal, you are my only friend; the only thing in which I can confide. I am going to go find something to eat now.…
"He began to dance and his laughter became a bloodthirsty snarling" (Golding, 54). William Golding depicts a scene of utter rejoice and of foul behavior. A group of boys stranded on an island, are forced to leave the arbitrary laws that dictate modern society. Lost in a place without rules, without a government, or adults to run it, the young boys manifest a society of their own. Struggling between the need for civilization and the thrill of savagery, two young boys are revealed as the social outcasts, of a society without function.…
Piggy Character Analysis What would you do if you were stranded on an island and no one wanted to listen to you? In Lord of the Flies, by William Golding, Piggy has shown to have very definable traits. He displays smartness, cleverness, and shrewdness. Piggy is an outcast because he is physically different. Piggy provided many good traits to the group of boys as a team and proved his intellect throughout the story.…