Microcosm In Lord Of The Flies Essay

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In the Lord of the Flies by William Golding, a group of boys find themselves stranded on an island and their decisions, as well as actions, conduct a deeper meaning beyond just that. In the beginning, it’s shown that the boys are innocent and find the idea of creating rules, to keep things from getting out of hand, to be a good plan. However, as the book further advances, the boys slowly turn to savagery as their way of doing things. Golding made the island a microcosm of society and thus, the things that occur on the island are resemblant for what’s going on in the rest of the world, like destruction, anarchy, and war. All throughout the Lord of the Flies, the children are stuck on an island, away from the outside world. At the start, the island represents solitude, vacation, and beauty. The boys liked the idea of having no adults around to tell them what to do. “This is our island. It’s a good island. Until the grownups come to …show more content…

Since their grasp on humanity is lessened, the children find themselves plummeting into a state of despair. In the first chapter of the novel, the kids are said to be very behaved, “the children gave him the same simple obedience that they had given the men with megaphones” (Golding 18). Even Jack’s choir, whom soon turn into violent hunters and Jack’s army, were compliant, “with dreary obedience the choir raised their hands” (Golding 23). As time progresses, all of this flips upside down. Jack smacked Piggy’s glass right off his face, they maul Simon, Jack ties up and beats Wilfred for no apparent reason. Moreover, Golding even displays this by referring to Jack’s group as little boys, then savages, to devils. Due to the diminishing of their connection to outside world, their obedience is forgotten and replaced with savagery. The kids lose their sense of themselves and each other and turn into

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