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Introduction to Lord of the Flies. The Author and Context William Golding – born 1911 Outbreak of WW1 – 1914 Outbreak of WW2 – 1939 – Golding served in.

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Presentation on theme: "Introduction to Lord of the Flies. The Author and Context William Golding – born 1911 Outbreak of WW1 – 1914 Outbreak of WW2 – 1939 – Golding served in."— Presentation transcript:

1 Introduction to Lord of the Flies

2 The Author and Context William Golding – born 1911 Outbreak of WW1 – 1914 Outbreak of WW2 – 1939 – Golding served in the Royal Navy He saw much action (inc. the Normandy Landings) and said that the war was a turning point for him when he began to realise what human beings were capable of

3 He believed that our humanity lies in our ability to make value judgements – what is good/bad right/wrong – and that science cannot answer these questions He learned about children’s behaviour when he was a school master He explores human nature through the characters of Ralph, Jack, Roger, Piggy and Simon in the novel Nuclear bombing of Hiroshima and Nagasaki – 1945 Soviet Union exploded A bomb in 1949 starting the Cold War and paranoia of Communism Lord of the Flies published – 1954 Golding died at home - 1993

4 Golding was also influenced by a novel called Coral Island: A Tale of the Pacific Ocean, by R. M. Ballantyne in which a group of British children are marooned on an island In Ballantyne’s book, the children behave like right and proper British citizens – Golding found the story childish and unlikely Name of Beelzebub – Milton’s ‘Paradise Lost’ - translated as ‘Lord of the flies’

5 Historical Events During Golding’s Life 35,000 45,000 6,000,000 5.7 million 20,000,000 5,500 approx.. Number of people killed in the bombing of Dresden Number killed by the atomic bomb on Hiroshima (pop. Of 225,000 people) Number of Jews exterminated in the Final Solution Number of Russian Prisoners of War in World War Two Stalin killed this many of his own people Number of allied troops killed in the Normandy D Day landings

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18 DRESDEN – NOW and THEN

19 What is Golding’s view of Human Nature? How do you know this? How might the events of World War Two have influenced this view?

20 Studying the Novel First, identify the main characters Then create a chapter-by-chapter narrative timeline listing the main events of each

21 Important Characters Ralph – the elected leader Piggy – intelligent but an outsider Jack – ex head boy, hunter and Chief Roger – Jack’s cruel lieutenant Maurice – a loyal savage but without Roger’s brutality Simon – shy, sensitive and courageous Sam and Eric (Samaneric) – twins; seen as one person

22 Chapter 1: The Sound of the Shell Setting is established – the island Ralph and Piggy find the conch and call 1 st meeting Jack and choirboys arrive Piggy’s nickname – links to the main theme of ‘the beast’ (we never learn his true name) Ralph elected as chief Ralph, Jack and Simon explore island The piglet

23 Chapter 2 – Fire on the Mountain Idea of ‘the beast’ is introduced by the ‘littleuns’ Differences between Ralph and Jack – fire, order and hunting Fire and its purpose – main theme throughout book Piggy’s glasses used to start 1 st fire Hunters to watch over it Piggy’s pleas to ‘act proper’ First death – fire out of control

24 Chapter 3 – Huts on the Beach Jack goes pig hunting – unsuccessfully Ralph builds shelters, helped by Simon Jack’s hunting obsession develops Further differences between Ralph and Jack Simon goes off into the forest on his own – we learn more about him as a character Boys begin to do what they want – foreshadowing the ‘savages’ they will later become

25 Chapter 4 – Painted Faces and Long Hair Roger on the beach with the ‘littleuns’ – signs of brutality to come Jack paints his face and goes hunting Ralph spots a ship Fire is out Pig killed – re-enactment of hunt Jack smashes one of Piggy’s lenses Ralph calls a meeting after fire goes out Growing divide between Ralph and Jack Jack clearly hates Piggy

26 Chapter 5 – Beast from Water Ralph prepares for another meeting and considers his role as chief He lays the ground rules for behaviour They discuss the beast Piggy and Simon are ignored Piggy realises that their fear is of people - logical Ralph and Jack disagree further and the meeting ends Simon and Piggy urge Ralph to remain as chief They wish for a sign from the grown up world

27 Chapter 6 – Beast from Air A dead parachutist lands on the island – a message from the adult world (which is at war) Sam and Eric tend the fire – they see ‘the beast’ Jack announces that they should hunt the beast and ridicules the conch – importance of action Bigger boys, without Piggy, go to unexplored part of island We see Ralph’s brave leadership qualities Simon understands the true nature of the beast

28 Chapter 7 – Shadows and Tall Trees Ralph realises how the boys are in decline – dirty and unkempt Simon knows that Ralph will return home safely Ralph reflects on home – flashback technique Boys re-enact wild boar hunt. Robert is hurt. Boys further descend into savagery Ralph, Jack and Roger see ‘the beast’ The island is a hostile place – language point (figurative language)

29 Chapter 8 – Gift for the Darkness Ralph, Jack and Roger report what they have seen Jack tries to overthrow Ralph but is rejected and leaves – others soon follow him New fire on the platform Jack becomes ‘the Chief’ – hunting, feasting and becoming ever more primitive Severed sow’s head on stick – Lord of the Flies Simon goes off alone and hears the words of the beast – he knows what it is

30 Chapter 9 – A View to a Death Simon sees the dead parachutist and heads off to tell the others Ralph and Piggy feast with Jack and clash over leadership styles (the use of the conch) Thunderstorm and Piggy senses trouble Tribal dance Simon stumbles into dancing circle Simon is killed as the beast Bodies of Simon and parachutist wash out to sea

31 Chapter 10 – The Shell and the Glasses Piggy and Ralph talk about the dance Sam and Eric join them – all lie to themselves about what happened Jack sets up camp at the other end of the island Ralph and Piggy fail to light the fire Raid by Jack and the hunters Theft of Piggy’s glasses Jack’s brutal dictatorship established

32 Chapter 11 – Castle Rock No more fire on the beach The conch group confront the hunters – Ralph intends to be civilised Piggy takes the conch to Castle Rock Roger rolls the rock on to Piggy Conch is destroyed and Piggy is killed Sam and Eric are captured by the hunters Ralph is alone – hunters hurl spears at him

33 Chapter 12 – Cry of the Hunters Ralph hides and considers his options He sees the pigs head and takes away the spear that supports it – different to Simon’s reaction Ralph visits Sam and Eric – now prisoners of Jack Ralph is totally alone Ralph is hunted Fire on the island Ship arrives Ralph is rescued Naval officer (from world of war) gets it wrong


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