Lord Of The Flies Visionary Leadership

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It took the United States of America less than thirteen years to civilly elect their first president. IN those many years, many malicious people attempted to step up and lead the States. Leaders can often be bad for groups if they are corrupt. Many visionaries and leaders are led by power and will stop at nothing to receive all the power they can. In William Golding’s Lord of the Flies, Golding uses young boys trapped on an island as an example of visionary leadership. Jack the visionary of the boys, forces all but three of them to hunt each other, when Jack conditions his followers to subscribe to his propaganda and destroy individualistic thinkers, his barbaric actions reveal, that when people who envision tyrannical government exert themselves as leaders in society, others are …show more content…

Cut his throat. Spill his blood!’” (152). While Jack’s commands get darker and darker, the boys still follow him in killing their companion, Simon. By getting his followers to trail behind him and support his evil ideas, Jack ascertains how all leaders must be perfect manipulators. While the boys grow more barbaric, Jack gets the boys to forget their morals and accompany him with all his plans, showing how Jack learns to forget his values, revealing that all leaders must abandon societal expectations of morality to keep their control. After being on the island for so long, Jack starts to thirst for blood, but he can swallow the feeling at first; “[Jack] tried to convey the compulsion to track down and kill that was swallowing him up” (51). Jack has feelings to kill, but has to try to keep them down and not give in. Eventually, Jack becomes so estranged that he does not even recognize himself; “[Jack] looked in astonishment, no longer at himself but at an awesome stranger”. “He began to dance and his laughter became a bloodthirsty

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