Lord of the Flies: Freud
Children all over the world hold many of the same characteristics. Most children are good at heart, but at times seem like little mischievous devils. Children enjoy having fun and causing trouble but under some supervision can be obedient little boys and girls. Everybody, at one time in their lives, was a child and knows what it is like to have no worries at all. Children have their own interests and react to different things in peculiar and sometimes strange ways. For example, children are enchanted with Barney and his jolly, friendly appearance without realizing that he is actually a huge dinosaur. In the novel The Lord of the Flies, by William Golding, one can see how children react to certain situations. Children, when given the opportunity, would choose to play and have fun rather than to do boring, hard work. Also, when children have no other adults to look up to they turn to other children for leadership. Finally, children stray towards savagery when they are without adult authority. In Lord of The Flies, Golding succeeds in effectively representing the interests and attitudes of young children in this novel. When children are given the opportunity, they would rather envelop themselves in pleasure and play than in the stre
sses of work. The boys show enmity towards building the shelters, even though this work is important, to engage in trivial activities. After one of the shelters collapses while only Simon and Ralph are building it, Ralph clamors, "All day I've been working with Simon. No one else. They're off bathing or eating, or playing." (55). Ralph and Simon, though only children, are more mature and stray to work on the shelters, while the other children aimlessly run off and play. The other boys avidly choose to play, eat, etc.... than to continue to work with Ralph which to them is very boring and uninteresting. The boys act typically of most children their age by being more interested in engaging in enjoyable activities than working and doing necessary work. Secondly, all the boys leave Ralph's hard-working group to join Jack's group who just want to have fun. The day after the death of Simon when Piggy and Ralph are bathing, Piggy points beyond the platform and says, "That's where they're gone. Jack's party. Just for some meat. And for hunting and for pretending to be a tribe and putting on war-paint."(163). Piggy realizes exactly why the boys have gone to Jack's, which would be for fun and excitement. The need to play and have fun in Jack's group, even though the boys risk the tribe's brutality and the chance of not being rescued, outweighs doing work with Ralph's group which increase their chance s of being rescued. Young children need to satisfy their amusement by playing games instead of doing work. This decisively shows that the children are more interested in playing than doing unexciting labor, which is expected of people their age. When children are without adults to look to for leadership, they look for an mature child for leadership. At the beginning of the novel, when the boys first realize they are all alone, they turn to Ralph for leadership. After Ralph calls the
Some common words found in the essay are:
Piggy Ralph, Piggy Roger, , Ralph Simon, Flies Golding, William Golding, Piggy Piggy, Golding Roger, I've Simon, Simon Ralph, adult authority, stray towards, children adults, remind boys, authority figures, towards savagery adult, chance rescued, novel boys, lord flies, jack's fun, gone jack's, stray towards savagery, children adults children, adult authority figures,
Approximate Word count = 1268
Approximate Pages = 5 (250 words per page double spaced)
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