What Is The Importance Of Cooperation In Lord Of The Flies

458 Words1 Page

In Lord of the Flies, a group of English boys are stranded on an island, which is the ideal situation for a series of complications. One of these complications is their cooperation. Although they complete numerous tasks effectively, it appears that their lack of cooperation is more prominent. This essay will demonstrate their cooperation, dearth of cooperation and potential improvements to their cooperation. The boys, despite being immature, contain the capability of functioning as a society. “We need an assembly. Not for fun. Not for laughing and falling off the log…” Pg. 79. This excerpt noticeably represents the formality of an assembly that they had congregated to establish laws for their social order (though temporary considering that they are children). The rubrics established were uniform guidelines with the intention to bring order; similar to the properties of a constitution. While this verbatim evidence supports their ability to cooperate, there are several instances in which the opposite is true. …show more content…

One of them is the following, which is the boys deciding to light a signal flare: “Now you been and set the whole island on fire.” Pg. 45. Ralph, the leader of these boys, declared that they would start a fire as a signal. A more practical action for survival would be gathering food in addition to creating accommodations (which is logical), but they ignored Piggy’s coherent and rational proposal. the result was them letting the jungle go ablaze, as well as a major setback. Had they proposed different strategies and nominated one as their focal strategy, the boys would be more successful in their endeavor to

Open Document