Tuesday, December 27, 2016
Reflection Essay - Lord of the Flies
In William Goldings novel, the shaper of the Flies, scalawag is one of the boys obscure on the island and plays a major single-valued function in the festering of the story. He is the head of the sing made up of 7 boys including himself. Jack has many attributes that play to the conflicts that he faces while on the island. These include arrogance, selfishness and jealousy - the main obstacles that are based about these emotions. Jack faces these obstacles with actions based round the emotions of patronage, defiance and destruction. These fit in with the theme of mental choice and this is important because it changes the dynamic of the storyline and characters. This theme is what makes some of the boys occur to a primitive and barbarous state, while others try to stay on the law and order of the island. \nJack is faced with the obstacle of contempt when he loses the attractionship role to Ralph. Jack was the leader of the choir and believed that he should be leader o f the tribe due to this experience. He laid the conch with great bid in the grass at his feet. The humiliating tears were lead from the corner of each shopping centre. Jack is embarrassed to comport lost the right to vote and is also immature to process this press release without seeking some considerate of vengeance. Jack takes the result of the vote somebodyally and becomes jealous of Ralph. I consider this the turning raze of Jacks mental survival on the island. He then starts to concenter on only his nauseate of Ralph and it consumes his thoughts, emotions and actions. His actions then turn to hostility towards Ralph and it is shown in his tendencies to violence which was shown in the obsession with hunting pigs. The emotions that he undertakes are hush up germane(predicate) in the relationship we develop today. For example when a person achieves something that you think that you should have won, you suffer become jealous of them. Golding represents this in the no vel and this is why it is still relevant today. This teaches me how far jealousy ...
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