What Is Piggy's Role In Lord Of The Flies

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In Lord of the Flies, Golding presents the reader with an example of how the societal role someone is given affects how they can contribute through the characterization of Piggy. On the island the boys must organize themselves without the role of grown ups, they hold together as best as they can but with the example of the warring world around them disorder falls. Piggy´s character is shown from the start with his introduction, in the repetition of hunting pigs, and the death of both him and the conch. In Piggy's introduction, he is as a character no one takes seriously, ¨...better than fatty.” The audience knows him as a joke despite his ideas and willingness to help the group. The things his ¨auntie” told him are no use on the island where there is no higher authority. …show more content…

They focus on survival needs and try to win the group over with the promise of meat. They only look for direct gratification so they can fulfill their second objective of having fun. Their want for meat develops into a manifestation of self-governed evil. This hits a peak when the hunters kill a sow, taking the life from something that gives it. They give the head as a gift to the beast which only gives it more power. The value pigs have only offers something destructable to entertain evil. Piggy clings to the conch, a representation of order and the only thing protecting him. He tries to save them from their own collapse. Holding it up, it shatters followed by Piggy falling off the cliff from impact. His head opens, like the pig whose head was cut off and, ¨ his arms and legs twitch like a pig.” He doesn’t die a boy, he dies the “Piggy” the audience is first introduced to. He wasn’t able to show Jack the one thing he hasn’t got and reason with him because they are too far

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