William Golding's Lord Of The Flies

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Pages: 3

William Golding is a prominent British writer in the 20th century. He wrote a lot of excellent works during his lifetime. However, Lord of the Flies is the most remarkable in all works. It was written under the background of his participation in World War II, which changed his optimistic attitude towards mankind. He wanted to disclose the evil nature of human through this novel. In 1983, William was awarded the Nobel Prize for Literature. The Nobel citation praised this novel: “with the perspicuity of realistic narrative art and the diversity and universality of myth, illuminate the human condition in the world of today” (Net. 1).
This story, Lord of the Flies, is about the decline of civilization. In a war, a group of British children take a plane which is shot down on an isolated island. With no adults around, they should take care of and govern themselves. They imitate the adult world, like electing a leader and having a meeting, and everything is arranged in good order. As time goes on, when they wait for rescue, the potential conflicts between Ralph and Jack
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Abroad, Alaa Lateef Alnajm reckoned that “Golding displays his characters to present different themes and ideas to give more understanding about the conflict and emotion of them” (2015: 98). He categorized the themes in four aspects: evil, the potential savagery of children, human civilization and sin. Jose George and Dr. R.L.N. Raju developed the idea, the theme of evil, further. They took some essential plots to draw a conclusion that “no society is bad in itself; it is the defective human nature that makes the defective society” (2015: 174). John Callon explored “the symbol of circles in the text rather than the more obvious symbol of the shell or the glasses” (2015: 1). This article showed the reason why the group that seeks for civilization originally becomes extremely violent at