William Golding
Biography
From childhood on, he
was drawn to the unpleasant and the dark. He
had generally very pessimistic view of human ability.
He wrote an
autobiographical piece under the title the Ladder and the Tree in which he
describes the house in which he was raised as being under the shadow of a nearby graveyard.
At the age of seven, he
became fascinated with the ancient Egyptian civilization, its world view and
its mysticism.
His first work entitled
Poems (1934) had a conventional, Georgian form, but the attitude reflected in
it was of the feeling of loss and satire.
Before having written
The Lord of the Flies, he experienced two things
that affected his further work.
First was that he served in the navy during the WWII
and the second was that he learned ancient Greek.
Golding’s novels
frequently involve a change of perspective.
Lord of the Flies (1954)
is still his most popular work of art. This novel astonished, appalled and
consternated many people because it reflected what many understood in private.
It revealed that men
enjoyed violence. He was not modernist
himself in terms of form, but his pessimism and scepticism made him close to
modernists.
He wanted to show that aggression and violence were particularly
appealing to the humankind.
Scholars have competed in determining the form of the novel. (Is it an allegory, is
it a parable, is it a science fiction, it is a romance). We see it either as a
moral fable, or as a social fable.
Another important note
is that the title itself is highly suggestive; Lord of the Flies in Bible is
the devil. There are various contradictory interpretations of the novel.
The Lord of the Flies
The story itself is very simple. On the surface, it is just a regular adventure story. The basis
is a simple adventure story of a group of boys who
are trying to survive on the deserted island after the shipwreck, much like the
story of Robinson Crusoe or the Treasure Island.
If we read it as a moral fable, the novel concentrates on human psyche. It examines psychological
disintegration of characters; we have a group of boys who are seen as
representatives of various patterns of behaviour, various instincts and various
aspects of personality. All of them symbolize almost allegorically one of these
aspects. Each boy character stands
for a particular aspect of human behaviour.
Piggy stands for intelligence,
reason and civilisation. Piggy, associated with pig is not negative quality, but just the opposite,
because pigs are believed to be intelligent animals. Glasses he wears reinforce
this symbolism; he is the character who analyses, looks under the surface of
things.
Jack stands for evil and destructive
instincts in human nature. He stands for the darkest drives within human beings. He is also
very manipulative and charismatic person.
Ralph symbolises a natural born leader, politician,
statesman, capable of either good or bad, depending on a context in which
he is placed.
Simon is a saint – like figure. Simon stands for honesty
and decency; that is what makes him a saint–like figure. The author wants to
show that such decency and honesty in our world strikes us as something out of
place, something naïve. He is a Jesus like figure.
The problem is that each
of the characters lacks some vital element, and none
of them is a complete person.
So, if we read the novel
as the moral fable, the novel is not
about the devil (Beelzebub – The Lord of the Flies),
though the title suggests it, it is about an unconscious level of the human
mind. The title and its suggestion to devil, suggests the dark,
immoral, most primitive drive of the human mind, which is present in each of us
and which is devastating when come to the surface.
Golding wants to show that some people are capable of acting morally, when put into extreme
situations they prove able to resist evil and take moral action. Simon, being a
saint like figure, proves capable to resist the instinct which he recognises in
himself and admit the evil in himself. That is one of the most important points
that Golding wants to make. In order to act morally,
the first and the most important step is to recognise the evil in oneself and admit it. Denying
evil is no answer. That is what makes Simon a saint like figure.
Other characters do not
have the ability that Simon has, the ability of moral behaviour. All of the
other characters are not capable of that, because they do not consciously admit
the existence of the evil within themselves, they are unable to recognise it.
Instead, they try to rationalise it, they
try to find justification for it, they try to blame the
other for it, they try to find the scapegoats. They find various kinds of
excuses for what is not excusable.
When we look at Ralph, who in contrast to Simon,
we find he lacks moral imagination. He is not capable of recognising his own
motives, he is motivated by selfishness, at times, blind selfishness, and usually he places his personal interest above the interest of the
community and puts everyone in danger. That is exactly what political leaders
are often accused of, namely, of taking their own interest to be more important
then the interest of the community.
This novel shows immense pessimism of its author. Establishing order in
the society has much to do with individual recognition. That is what
revolutions proved throughout the history. It one wants to reform the society
from above, such attempt will likely fail, because the true change can only come from the individual. This is the point of
awareness raising campaigns of today. Society is just the sum of individuals; one cannot change the society if individuals are not changed.
Individual reform
requires one’s own awareness of one’s own evil deep inside, inclination towards
savagery, inevitably leads to anarchy, chaos, deterioration. He has a very
positive view of society, unlike most modernists.
To Golding, nature is opposed to culture, nature suggests instincts, animalistic
drives, anarchic forces, while culture suggest civilisation, control of one’s
instincts, society, laws of behaviour. Golding believed that society, no matter how faulty and imperfect, was the only true
environment for men.
We see at the very
beginning that when boys are physically put into the nature, they automatically
try to establish some form of the society; unfortunately they fail
in their ‘project’. According to Golding, the
society ensures that the evil would be kept in check, that is what the
government structure is there for.
Looking at another aspect of the novel, namely the novel as a
social fable, the novel becomes a very harsh satire, anti utopian social
satire.
What Golding presents in
the novel is not an utopia, he tricks the reader at the beginning into
believing it would turn out to be the utopia, but it turns out quite the
opposite, the so-called dystopia. The society created by the boys on the island symbolises the society
in general and the boys symbolise the human race in general.
One interpretation would
also be that this island society stands for all primitive societies at the
beginning of their development, without the organised structures of state
apparatus..
The reason adults were shocked with what they have seen on the
island is the result of their own inability to recognise this evil that resides
in all human beings, children and adults alike. The ruin that the boys
bring upon themselves is universal.
In the chapter Beast
from the Water, Golding offers not only different elements of human psyche, but
also various possible elements of social system.
In this case it is a
very dark social satire. It shows how intelligence (Piggy) and common sense
(Ralph) will always be overthrown by totalitarianism (Jack) or savagery
(Roger). It is a very pessimistic view. According to Golding, every kind of
system, including this parliamentarian system, seem to be inefficient. He also
suggests that totalitarian leaders, such as Jack, obviously have some
charismatic ability to appeal to the darkest in us.
The novel can be read as a dramatisation of an extreme political
scenario, which shows how democracy, a responsible kind of a system, which is
unfortunately boring to most people, can quickly be replaced by
totalitarianism. The charismatic, the totalitarian, the evil, always seem to be
more exciting to most people then the good. When we look at the
context (1954) it must be brought in connection with disillusionment of the author after the war.
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