Lord Of The Flies Rhetorical Analysis

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Analysis of Lord of Flies Student’s Name Institutional Affiliation Introduction In this book, Lord of the Flies Golding reflects on his time and the events that were taking place, his personal life experiences that are cultural, religious and social aspects of his time. The book begins with a conversation between Ralph and piggy giving a glimpse of the situation they are in. It is in the middle of a nuclear war when a group of boys are being evacuated to a destination that has not been mentioned. Their plane crashes and is dragged out to sea. They boys, between ages 6 and 12, find themselves on an island where there is no sign of human existence. The situations back home are so tense that no one knows the whereabouts of …show more content…

People turned to him because they felt weak and depressed. Historically in times of social and economic distress, the public feels vulnerable and turns to the leader who exhibits strength and power to offer the most protection. This is mirrored in Golding’s book where Jack offers such comfort together with the hunters who can give meat and the comfort of dictatorship (Olsen, 2000). The other boys feel content with it, and they enthusiastically sacrifice any moral reservations they may have about his policies and rules persecuting the other boys who resist joining their tribe. Golding finds that the atrocities are not a preserve of a nation, in fact, he suggests that any country can commit crimes of the same magnitude as what happened in Germany Nazi camps or even the killings witnessed in the atomic war in the World War 11 where more than 55 million people were killed (Olsen, 2000). Such picture of deaths or the effects of war is captured by Golding’s work where the boys are evacuated, and the sign from the world of grownups that the boys so wish for turns out to be a dead paratrooper flying down from an aerial …show more content…

The text outlines a plot that gives a chronological order of events that eventually leads to death and devastation. The boys go through gradual degradation as they turn into evil characters with bestial behavior. They change from the once organized English lads into it wild beings. They go through this human change as they gradually walk through a new life free from social limitations, restrictions and punishment from adults. The transformation is observed in the three major characters of the novel; particularly Ralph, Jack and Piggy. The life experiences these three boys adopt on the island cause them to be exposed to the evil that lies within their civilized nature. The experiences influenced them both mentally and physically to the extent where they forget or lose their own

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