Common Themes In Lord Of The Flies

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In the novel, Lord of the Flies, the author William Golding conceals an endless number of themes within the tale. Throughout the novel, the characters face many ongoing challenges as chaos erupts and tensions flare from the lack of adult supervision to watch over and guide the children in a direction that would lead to a more civilized stay on the island. William Golding’s novel focuses profoundly on the separation from a humane civilization that represents virtuous and godly actions, which begins to collapse and turns into an uncultured civilization that represents immoral and sinful actions, but the novel also relates to past pieces of literature. The most well-known pieces of literature that the novel relates to is the Bible. One of the …show more content…

The beautiful island seems to be a modern-day Garden of Eden, where at first there is no presence of sin, and the children begin to organize their community to show how they are moral and civil as Great Britain, which is the children’s homeland. In the novel, the children treat British civilization as a higher power and from the beginning of the novel, the children desire to be rescued by a passing British naval ship. As that is one out of the two possible ways the children would ever be able to leave the island, the second possible way being death. The group made a decision, that there would be two separate groups, the hunters and then the builders, but just a few days into production many of the builders would no longer help, and Ralph becomes very angry that his only help is Simon (Golding 50). With growing tensions within the group, the children began to argue back and forth as most of the children were bringing nothing to the table, while the others worked. In an online article based on themes within the novel Lord of the Flies the author states, “The novel opens in a modern-day Eden, at first

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