Authority of Leadership in Lord of the Flies by William Golding

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“‘The rules!’ shouted Ralph. ‘You’re breaking the rules!’ ‘Who cares?’ Ralph summoned his wits: ‘Because the rules are the only thing we’ve got!’” (91). In Lord of the Flies, Ralph says this to Jack at one of their assemblies, after having berated the boys for neglecting the shelter building and the signal fires. Ralph’s leadership is built on these rules, and Jack’s breaking of them causes an ideological conflict between them which eventually leads to Ralph’s loss of power among the group. He tries to create a just and orderly society to fulfill their needs and allow them to be rescued, but the boys eventually find Jack’s churlish lethargy and excess to be more desirable. Desirable, as defined by the Oxford English Dictionary, can be "wanted or wished for as being an attractive, useful, or necessary course of action" (OED, but how do I cite this?? I don’t know). Although Ralph’s style of leadership allows for freedom of expression through the conch, its emulation of traditional society1 requires greater responsibility from the boys; in contrast, Jack’s rule offers them fewer responsibilities and greater freedom of desires2, which they view as appealing and advantageous, making it more desirable. Ralph’s style of leadership, with its assigned duties and organized meetings, is thought of as a restriction by the other boys; Ralph plays the same role as the authority figures in their previous lives, causing them to eventually resent his ideology as opposed to Jack’s. His power was derived from chance: his discovery of the conch, and Piggy’s instructions on how to use it comprised his original popularity among the boys; he brings them together with it and its mystery causes him to be elected “chief.” The rules of Ralph’s c... ... middle of paper ... ...on, Jack’s serves as an escape from it, allowing the boys to entertain their savage instincts, an concept possible only with the isolated abandon of the island. But while Golding is saying Jack’s style of leadership is more desirable, the shift of power from Ralph to Jack is a disastrous process. At first, Ralph thinks Jack’s hunters see their life on the island as a game, and the boys do, in fact, join his tribe to be free from the responsibilities of reality. But as the book progresses, the isolation again allows the “game” on the island to become gravely serious, resulting in an ideological war similar to that going on around it. While Ralph loses power and the conflict escalates, he remains strong in his convictions. When the rest of the world is involved in a game that has escalated into a nuclear war, the rules really are all they have left.

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