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Delve into William Golding's background and analysis of his renowned novel "Lord of the Flies." Learn about the major themes, symbols, characters, and the author's life, offering insights into the struggle between civilization and savagery. Uncover the symbolic significance of the conch shell, signal fire, and the beast while exploring the narrative's exploration of power, identity, and human nature's darker aspects.
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Lord of the Flies William Golding Background and Analysis Ms. Crystal Barbour
William Golding • Born Sept 19, 1911 • Cornwall, England • Attended Oxford University • Studied English Literature and philosophy • Joined Royal navy in WWII • Career as school teacher • Published Lord of the Flies in 1954
William Golding • LOTF - His first and greatest success • After it was published, he retired from teaching and wrote full time • Awarded Nobel Prize for Literature in 1983 • Knighted in 1988 • Died 1993 • His books deal with darker side of human nature
Lord of the Flies Novel dramatizes struggle between impulse to have order, rules, and moral behavior AND the impulse to act self-indulgently, seek power over others, and behave amorally. Civilization/common good for society versus Anarchy/savagery/selfish instinct
Lord of the Flies Bart as Jack • Two extremes represented by: Ralph – protagonist Jack – antagonist • Piggy represents intelligence and clear sightedness (his glasses)
Lord of the Flies • Ralph’s name – “counsel” (Anglo-Saxon) • Jack’s name – “one who supplants” (Hebrew) • Simon’s name – “listener” (Hebrew) • Roger’s name – “spear” (Germanic)
Major Themes • Need for civilization – basic needs of society • Fear of the unknown • Blindness and sight • Use and abuse of power • Loss of identity • Evil within human beings • Survival • Betrayal • Justice / injustice • Violence / death • Leadership
Symbols • Conch shell – symbolizes order and authority; organization • Signal fire – symbolizes common sense and light of hope and rescue • Beast – symbolizes evil – both within and without; fear of the unknown
Two movie versions