Characterization In The Lord Of The Flies

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Characterization
Golding uses the characterization of the Jack, Roger, and Ralph to show their capacity for destruction. One of the effects of war is the destruction of buildings, people, and even entire land masses. At the heart of civilization lurks a persistent sense of savageness and once men were stripped of the veneer of adulthood, they quickly revert to being malicious boys who kill for sport (Singh), and Jack undeniably represents evil and violence-the dark side of human nature in The Lord of the Flies. From the moment he arrives on the island it is evident that Jack possesses a sense of superiority, “the boy came close and peered down at Ralph, screwing up his face as he did so. What he saw of the fair-haired boy with the creamy shell …show more content…

Although Ralph is not nearly as savage and barbaric as Jack and Roger, Golding still manages to show how Ralph is able to lose himself on the island too. Ralph is the chief of the island who represents order and civilization. Ralph sets plans to get things done and have fun doing it because he only sees their stay bounded on this island temporary. Ralph believes that “‘While we’re waiting we can have a good time on this island’” (34). But soon his vision of a perfect stay is cut short. He complains that “‘When the meetings was over they’d work for five minutes, then wander off or go hunting’” (51), and by saying this to Jack he starts his first verbal fight with Jack. Ralph, like everyone else on the island, is just a boy. Ralph has things he wants to do on the island but cannot because he is elected chief. “Ralph found that he was able to measure the distance coldly and take aim. With the boar only five yards away, he flung the foolish wooden stick that he carried, saw it hit the great snout and hang there for a moment…Ralph was full of fright, apprehension and pride” (113). This is the first time in the book that Ralph was involved in anything that the hunters ever did. Ralph tapped into his primitive side and this excites him because as chief he has to make sure everything is order and organized. However, Ralph knows that this is not how a chief should be acting, but Golding makes it clear that Ralph is as capable of hunting as any of the other boys. When Simon dies, all of the boys took part in the murder, even Ralph. With the threat of the storm and the formation of Jack’s knew tribe, Ralph finds himself in the position in which “he was eager to take a place in this demented but partly secure society” (152). At this point, all of the boys were chanting their hunt song to the point that “There was a throb and stamp of a single organism” (152). “When Simon is killed, the circle of hunters led by Jack is

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