Lord Of The Flies Theme Analysis

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Major themes in the book Lord of the Flies
In the world today there are still good and bad people and people that are savages and people who are civilized. If someone was to go out in the world and look around they will soon see the good and civilized and the Savage and evil thing. I have seen both sides, I go to school where there are groups of students that are separated by the things they do and the people they hang out with. It is related to the book Lord of the Flies written by William Golding there are groups of kids that are separated by the things they believe in. One of the groups is a good civilized group that want to be rescued and go home. The other group is led by a evil and savage leader who only wants meat. They began to separate into their own groups because they disagreed with each other. …show more content…

In the book there are many places where the reader can see the clash between civilization and savagery. Ralph is the leader of the civilized group that wants shelter and a signal fire to be rescued. Jack is the leader of the hunter who eventually become the savage group that just wants meat. In this part of the book the hunters and Ralph's group are arguing about what they should do and Ralph is saying a speech and the hunters are laughing. ¨You hunter! You can laugh! But I tell you the smoke is more important than the pig¨(81). This is a part where the Civilization clashes with Savagery this makes Jacks group mad at Ralph because they want to do there own thing but Ralph is the chief of the group so they have to listen. The theme is developed by the continuous disagreement between the groups and eventually the hunter leave to make there own group of savages. A person cold relate this to the real world because the island that the kids are on symbolizes the world. We see it in our world with many things where people separate because of the things they believe in like politics and racism. In another part of the book

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