Isolation In Lord Of The Flies Essay

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There are events in everyone’s lives that alter them forever. In the novel Lord of the Flies by William Golding, 4 boys in particular leave the island completely separate from the person they were when they arrived. Life after being stuck on a stranded island with no adults and losing sense of societal norms is not easy. Young and impressionable, Ralph, Jack, and Samneric will never be the same after seeing first hand what beast lies within everyone. In the beginning of the book, Ralph was the leader of a civil society on the island. However, as the story progressed, Ralph slowly lost control to the savageness of the others, until eventually all the boys turned on him. It puzzled and fascinated Ralph how he could be such a good leader and still have the boys betray him. Ralph is curious about what isolation from society and civilization can do to people, and he’s especially intrigued, as well as frightened, what isolation is capable of doing to him, “Ralph too was fighting to get near, to get a handful of that brown, vulnerable flesh. The desire to squeeze and hurt was …show more content…

This idea was prominently expressed through Jack. The circumstances on the island lend themself for Jack’s inner savage to flourish. Although at first he tries to conceal his inner vulgarity, he eventually is consumed by it, “He tried to convey the compulsion to track down and kill that was swallowing him up”(P. 51). Leaving the island engulfed in his viciousness, life back home would be a rough adjustment. Once home, he isn’t be able to control himself and he becomes involved in multiple dangerous situations. In one instance he gets in a fight with someone and as his rage takes control of him he is flashbacked to the reenactments of the hunts on the island, and almost kills the person he was fighting. While the island changed the others, it only revealed who Jack really is and what he’s capable

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