Zusammenfassung der Ressource
Lord of the Flies: Way it's written
- Vivid
Description
- Literary
Techniques
- Uses a lot of
literary
techniques
- Can show a lot
- Charcter's
mood
- Character's
inside
- Character's
understanding
- Weather
- important all
way through
- Constantly being
used as a sense of
foreshadowing
- Weather on
shore, sea,
etc. reflects
whats going to
come next
- All more tragic?
- Beach,
mountain,
jungle
- Settings
- Beach,
Mountain,
jungle
- Reflects different states of
mind and different kinds
of actions that happen
within them
- Symbols
- Log
- The
power/throne
or selected
area of
power
- Lord of the
Flies (the
beast)
- The head of a
pig staked
into the
ground
- Paganism
- Symbolic of
offering
- Symbolises evil
that lies within
each person
- Death's:
Piggy &
Simon
- Piggy
- The death of
rationality, order
and the old ways of
democracy
- Simon
- The death of the
spirit/ the wonder of
humanity
- The Scar
- It is the rip in the forest
caused by the crash
landing of th boys' plane
on the island.
- Symbolizes that man, his
savage nature- destroys
paradise merely by entering it.
- glasses
- Without this
they wouldn't
have got started
throughout the
novel
- eating of meat
- cause of arguement
- cause of being rescued
- Allows Piggy to see
and serves as a fire
making tool
- Symbolic of old
world, of order and
of progress and
technology
- Shows good side of man. Clothes
are made by man but they were
burnt and we can do without it.
- religious
- religious
things happen
- offerings
- hallucinations
- Colours
- white
- officer
- Red
- blood shed
- Fire
- represents technology
- Like the atomic
bombs
destroying the
worlds around
the boys' island,
fire is a
technology that
threatens
destruction if it
gets out of
control.
- Symbolises the boy's
connection to human
civilisation: their signal
fire gives them hope of
rescue
- Conch
- Used to call assemblies
- a kind of microphone that
grants the right to speak to
whomever holds it during the
assembly
- symbolises rule of law and civilisation
- Adults
- boys perception of adults
- symbolizes
civilisation and
social order to
boys
- Readeer' perception of adults
- The world raging
outside the island
makes it clear that
the adult
"civilization" is as
savage as the boys'
"civilization" on the
island
- The Island
- symbolizes paradise
- It's bountiful
food and
untouched
beauty
- A garden of
Eden in which
the boys can try
to create the
perfect society
from scratch
- microcosm
- reflection of society
on ver small scale
- The ocean
- Symbolizes the
unconsciousness, the thoughts
and the desires buried deep
within all humans
- sin?
- attempted
killing of a pig
like a
breakthrough
- killings
will
happen
- death will
reign the
island
- Structure
- builds
- builds thoroughly
straight from
platform
- the story generally
grows and grows
like a society would
grow
- The story generally
grows like a society
would grow
- like when it gets to a point when you create a group that
when you hit a certain number of time, a certain number of
action, a certain number of rules when division and
breakdown actually starts
- Timeless
- Long enough...
- to forget their
old lives so it's
like they've
always been
there
- For their hair to
get really long
- Not sure how long
they are on the
island
- Could have been
over a couple of
weeks and months
- Fragments
- consists of
12 different
chapters
- We move within
bits at a time
- So we can focus on
an area at a time it
is not a glued
narrative
- Very explicit
- Character's don't
have other lives
- A fresh start
- good little boys on an
island lets see what
happens
- then we see how
society grows, functions
and destroys itself
- Irony
- Piggy
- Piggy says to Ralph "grownups
know things. They ain't afraid of the
dark. They'd meet and have tea and
discuss. Then things 'ud be all right
- It was due to the adults
that they're stranded in
the first place
- They themselves
could not discuss
and solve rtheir
problems and as a
result they turned to
wa
- If they had been able to come up
with another solution than war,
the boys would never have fled
school and would never have been
shot down, therefore avoiding
ever being on the island.
- Piggy's name
- The boys admit
their fear and
belief towards
the beast and
believed that the
beast would eat
from them
- They decide to give the
beast something to feed
upon
- They discuss how they
should sacrifice the pig
- Later on they murder
Piggy and discover
that the beast did not
actually exist in
another creature but
was within themselves
- Important character
nevertheless we never
find out his true name.
He is severely teased
despite being the
smartest boy
- Piggy's eyes
- he can't see well
because of his
glasses
- got greatest insight on what
will happen in the future-
what will go wrong and right
and how should they behave
accordingly
- Fire
- Fire at end was intended
for destruction but in
fact saved them all.
- Parachutist
- Boys wanted guidance or a sign
from the adults- hoping it will
increase their chances of
survival
- Parachutist dropped
on island and the only
presence of an adult
ends up causing the
most chaos as they
belivee he is the
beast.
- A soldier in the war who
died in the air force while
saving his country
- The fact that the boys thought
that he was a beast is ironic
because the soldier is far from a
beast
- Jack
- In chapter 4, Jack abandons fire
as he fells it is unimportant
however in the end Jack is the one
who starts the fire that led them
to being saved.
- At the beginning of the
book he says to the young
boys- "we've got to have
rules and obey the. After all
we're not savages.'
- Later on...
- he encourages boys to
forget civilisation and act
upon their instincts
- He's the leader of the tribe
- he's against all of the rules that
have been set on the island
- he commits
horrifying acts of
murder and torture
- he ignore's the laws
that they all agreed to
follow while on the
island
- Simon
- Simon's death
- He was bringing them
the truth about the
beast- what they feared
the most
- It was there fear that led to
the dance that made them
kill him
- Simon is considered
the Christ like figure
on the island. Jesus is
universally known as
the savior, while
Simon was on the way
to save the boys
literally and
metaphorically by
telling them the truth
about the beast he
was murdered for
being mistaken for
the beast (devil).
- Officer
- He thought the boys were
chasing each other for fun
on the island. When, in fact,
they were chasing Ralph as
he was trying to escape the
boys otherwise he'd be
brutally killed
- Saves the boys so he is
hero-like but is part of a
battleship himself. So he
saves the boys from each
other just to go off and be
involved in the deaths of
others
- Boat-shaped Island
- Ironic because all
the boys needed to
get off the island was
a boat
- Refugees
- They're running away from
war, however they ended up
spending time in a war themselves
- Perfect Island = dystopia
- Starts off fun
but ends up
being a pure
dystopia
- Dystopia- an
imagined place or
state in which
everything is
unpleasant or bad,
typically a totalitarian
one.
- We think it'll go
one way but in the
end this
micro-cosmic
civilisation is born
- Dystopian
elements
- A disagreement of
views between at least
two groups.
- Murder of innocents
- People that don't obey
the government
- Revolution
- Dialogue
- Insults
- Crude
- Straught-up
- How piggy and Simon
are treated and
spoken to
- Real
- Young boys
- Things are said simply
and directly
- like calling Piggy
'fatty' and 'piggy'
- Class
- Class is
indicated
through speech
- How boys at the time
would have spoken
- Piggy is working class
- The other boys are school boys