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    this in most of the characters in Lord of the Flies and especially Jack and Ralph. They each fight for authority one way or another‚ despite Ralph having already been elected chief. Although they had landed in the same unfortunate situation at the same time‚ their initial respect for one another dwindles and turns into contempt as the time drones on. The second Jack becomes sick of Ralph’s jurisdiction‚ he rebels and tries to take the crown for himself while Ralph tries to keep the kingdom together

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    The animalistic‚ selfish and inherently evil nature of human beings is illustrated and referenced through allegory‚ an act of interpretation to further demonstrate concepts of the human condition. In William Golding’s novel The Lord of the Flies‚ the characters and setting are read as an allegory linking directly to religious figures and biblical stories‚ including those of Cain and Abel‚ Adam and Eve and of Jesus Christ‚ to unveil the harsh truths about the boys’ inherent savagery and the inevitable

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    the‚ “Life of man [is] solitary‚ poor‚ nasty‚ brutish‚ and short” (Hobbes 77). Clearly he didn’t think that humanity was a good group of beings. In the Lord of the Flies by William Golding‚ one character‚ Jack Merridew‚ displays many characteristics of Hobbes’ philosophy on man. Time after time‚ Golding subtly refers to Hobbes’ philosophy through Jack and his reactions with other characters in the book. After Golding introduces the boys‚ they want to elect a chief‚ and already‚ Golding is using Hobbes’

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    Goldie Bignell The successful and what could have been successful societies in both Lord of the Flies and The Crucible eventually decayed and fell apart. There were struggles with good and evil in Salem and on the island that were the result of three main elements. Fear‚ misuse of power and fanatical religious beliefs were the cause of the two societies failure. In Salem‚ anything unusual or different from the norm was seen as alien and sinful. When Parris saw the girls dancing in the woods

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    Lord of the Flies Essay

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    Abbey Beissler Hour 4 “‘Don’t you understand‚ Piggy? The things we did –’” (157). In this quote‚ Ralph is experiencing a personal loss of identity after he participated in the murder of Simon. The child soldiers in the Ugandan civil war can be compared to the Lord of the Flies because of its relation to a loss of identity. Loss of identity through traumatizing experiences includes becoming unemotional killing machines‚ a change in character‚ and distrust towards others. Loss of identity

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    William Golding uses “Lord of the Flies” to explain how children act when they are with and without adults. Children act different in this story‚ because they don’t have any adults to look after them‚ or tell them what’s right from wrong. William represents civilization through the character of Ralph‚ because he has an orderly government compared to Jack’s savagery. Golding tells about a group of boys‚ who survived after a plane crash on remote tropical island without any adults and how they are

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    "Ralph wept for the end of innocence‚ the darkness of man’ heart‚ and the fall through the air of his true‚ wise friend called Piggy" demonstrates the main theme of this novel: man is evil by nature. The three things that Ralph weeps for are the lessons he has on this island: innocent boys become savage; all human beings have evil deep inside their hearts and the fall of science and rationality before the evil of human. These three issues are developed throughout the whole novel with this passage

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    Alienation‚ out group‚ rites of passage‚ hunting and gathering‚ oligarchy‚ coalition‚ power‚ authority‚ obedience‚ discovery‚ invention‚ culture shock‚ deviance‚ norms‚ values‚ machismo --- all of which are found in the paragraph below. Lord of the Flies not only serves as a great coming of age tale but also introduces many sociological concepts that can be exposed through the plot and characters within the movie/book. Like any coming of age tale there are rites of passage in which the boys experience

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    always lacking knowledge‚ humans are often afraid of the unknown. Lord of the Flies by William Golding has many symbols and events that represent things and real events in our world‚ such as various religious allegories. Many of the events in Lord of the Flies are related to the stories in the Bible. The stories about the Garden of Eden‚ Cain and Abel‚ and the temptation of Jesus are similar to certain events in Lord of the Flies. Through religious allegory of Bible stories related to paranoia

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    Lord of the Flies Essay

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    ESSAY. Lord Of The Flies clearly shows that civilisation is only skin-deep. Discuss. One of the key themes of the novel Lord Of The Flies is that beneath a veil of rules and propriety‚ humans hide a savage nature and instinct. The novel tells the story of a group of young boys dropped on an uninhabited island‚ and their struggle to replicate the society that they grew up in. The society that we live in today is much like the society the boys grew up in. It is built upon rules and regulations

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