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Why should you read “Lord of the Flies” by William Golding? - Jill Dash

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    William Golding was losing
    his faith in humanity.
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    Serving aboard a British destroyer
    in World War II,
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    the philosophy teacher turned Royal Navy
    lieutenant was constantly confronted
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    by the atrocities of his fellow man.
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    And when he returned to England
    to find Cold War superpowers
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    threatening one another
    with nuclear annihilation,
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    he was forced to interrogate
    the very roots of human nature.
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    These musings on the inevitability
    of violence
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    would inspire his first and most famous
    novel: "Lord of the Flies."
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    After being rejected by 21 publishers,
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    the novel was finally published in 1954.
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    It takes its title from Beelzebub,
    a demon associated with pride and war—
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    two themes very much
    at the heart of Golding’s book.
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    The novel was a bleak satire
    of a classic island adventure story,
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    a popular genre where young boys
    get shipwrecked in exotic locations.
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    The protagonists in these stories
    are able to master nature
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    while evading the dangers
    posed by their new environments.
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    The genre also endorsed
    the problematic colonialist narrative
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    found in many British works at the time,
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    in which the boys teach the island’s
    native inhabitants
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    their allegedly superior British values.
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    Golding’s satire even goes so far
    as to explicitly use the setting
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    and character names from R.M. Ballantyne’s
    "Coral Island"—
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    one of the most beloved
    island adventure novels.
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    But while Ballantyne’s book
    promised readers
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    "pleasure... profit... and unbounded
    amusement,”
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    Golding’s had darker things in store.
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    "Lord of the Flies" opens
    with the boys already on the island,
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    but snippets of conversation hint
    at their terrifying journey—
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    their plane had been shot down in
    the midst of an unspecified nuclear war.
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    The boys, ranging in age from 6 to 13,
    are strangers to each other.
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    All except for a choir, clad in black
    uniforms and led by a boy named Jack.
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    Just as in Ballantyne’s "Coral Island,"
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    the boy’s new home appears
    to be a paradise—
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    with fresh water, shelter,
    and abundant food sources.
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    But even from the novel’s opening pages,
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    a macabre darkness hangs over
    this seemingly tranquil situation.
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    The boys’ shadows are compared
    to “black, bat-like creatures”
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    while the choir itself first appears as
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    “something dark... fumbling along”
    the beach.
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    Within hours of their arrival,
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    the boys are already trading terrifying
    rumors of a vicious “beastie”
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    lurking in the woods.
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    From these ominous beginnings,
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    Golding’s narrative reveals
    how quickly cooperation unravels
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    without the presence
    of an adult authority.
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    Initially, the survivors try
    to establish some sense of order.
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    A boy named Ralph blows into a conch shell
    to assemble the group,
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    and delegate tasks.
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    But as Jack vies
    for leadership with Ralph,
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    the group splinters
    and the boys submit to their darker urges.
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    The mob of children soon forgets
    their plans for rescue,
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    silences the few voices of reason,
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    and blindly follows Jack to the edge
    of the island, and the edge of sanity.
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    The novel’s universal themes
    of morality, civility, and society
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    have made it a literary classic,
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    satirizing both conventions of its time
    and long held beliefs about humanity.
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    While island adventure stories
    often support colonialism,
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    "Lord of the Flies"
    turns this trope on its head.
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    Rather than cruelly casting native
    populations as stereotypical savages,
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    Golding transforms his angelic British
    schoolboys into savage caricatures.
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    And as the boys fight
    their own battle on the island,
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    the far more destructive war
    that brought them there
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    continues off the page.
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    Even if the boys were to be rescued
    from themselves,
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    what kind of world would
    they be returning to?
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    With so few references
    to anchor the characters
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    in a specific place or period,
    the novel feels truly timeless—
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    an examination of human nature
    at its most bare.
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    And though not all readers
    may agree with Golding’s grim view,
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    "Lord of the Flies" is unsettling enough
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    to challenge even the most
    determined optimist.
Title:
Why should you read “Lord of the Flies” by William Golding? - Jill Dash
Speaker:
Jill Dash
Description:

View full lesson: https://ed.ted.com/lessons/why-should-you-read-lord-of-the-flies-by-william-golding-jill-dash

After witnessing the atrocities of his fellow man in World War II, William Golding was losing his faith in humanity. Later, during the Cold War, as superpowers began threatening one another with nuclear annihilation, he was forced to interrogate the very roots of human nature and violence. These musings would inspire his first novel: “Lord of the Flies.” Jill Dash dives into the timeless satire.

Lesson by Jill Dash, directed by Lucy Animation Studio.

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Video Language:
English
Team:
closed TED
Project:
TED-Ed
Duration:
04:25

English subtitles

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