80 likes | 251 Views
Lord of the Flies background. Notes on the author and novel. I. William Golding. Described as a moralist with a dark view of human nature During WW2, he served for five years in the Royal Navy Navy experience shattered his youthful optimism about the innate goodness of human nature.
E N D
Lord of the Flies background Notes on the author and novel
I. William Golding • Described as a moralist with a dark view of human nature • During WW2, he served for five years in the Royal Navy • Navy experience shattered his youthful optimism about the innate goodness of human nature
II. Golding’s outlook on life • Evil springs from within the human being • The struggle to maintain civilization depends on the ethical nature of the individual
III. Historical and Cultural Context LOtF has influences not only of the historical period in which it was written, but also various cultural theories and beliefs from earlier times.
IV. Historical Happenings • Bombing of cities during WW2 (1939 – 1945)…millions killed or displaced • News of the Nazis’ systematic extermination of Jews and other groups…how could this happen in modern civilized society? • Enormous power of atomic bombs…is scientific progress beneficial or is it a threat to society?
V. Cultural beliefs • “Lord of the Flies” is an English translation of Beelzebub, an ancient name for the devil. • Golding reacts to the concept of the “noble savage” espoused by writers such as French philosopher Rousseau. • Noble savage: people in a natural state are basically good and civilization corrupts human nature
VI. Before the novel begins… • Nuclear war • British schoolboys on an evacuation plane have been shot down • Crash on a deserted island
VII. Background References Scar: the plane has crashed on the island, burning away foliage, thus creating a “scar” Creepers: plants that grow along the ground The Coral Island: a book where shipwrecked schoolboys establish a utopian society and maintain their belief in the superiority of English civilization In Lord of the Flies, Golding rejects the harmony that exists on Coral Island.