The Lord Of The Flies Quote Analysis

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Willing Spirits
Change your perspective, try to see the positive and negative effects on an individual’s certain environment or situation. People can go through very difficult situations and come out completely different, but some people with strong mind can go through hardships and still stay the same. Whether it can be being abused or ultimately being thrown onto an island with no civilization. An individual can control the situation and environment only if they have a willing spirit.
Individuals with strong morals can overcome a mentally challenging situation or environment. In the novel The Lord of the Flies, Piggy was one of the two people on the island to keep …show more content…

The article reports that the “South African government imprisoned him for 27 years, but Mandela persevered. During his imprisonment, Mandela became a hero to people around the world and a symbol of the injustice of apartheid” (“Biography of Nelson Mandela”).
This article proves that even when Mandela was imprisoned, he never gave up or lost hope in himself. Mandela was still able to overcome the pressure of being behind bars for more than a decade. He still did his work even when in dark times.
Situations and environment can cause paranoia which could manipulate the individual's mind. In The Lord of the Flies, another piece of evidence is when Jack was not able to deal with the pressure of being in the wild. When killing a pig after hunting he would chant “ ‘Kill the beast! Cut his throat! Spill his blood! Do him in’ ” (Golding 139)! In Golding’s novel, he insists that not everyone can remain calm when enclosed in a different environment. With Jack being stuck on a island with no civilization, he loses his mind and becomes a savage on a blinded rampage. In the article, “The Milgram Obedience Experiment”, Stanley Milgram quoted, “The social psychology of this century reveals a major lesson: often it is not so much the kind of person a man is as the kind of situation in which he finds himself that determines how he will act” (Cherry). In “The

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