EssaysForStudent.com - Free Essays, Term Papers & Book Notes
Search

Lord of the Flies: the Two Political Forces

By:   •  Essay  •  327 Words  •  March 14, 2010  •  926 Views

Page 1 of 2

Lord of the Flies: the Two Political Forces

In “Lord of the Flies” by William Golding, a group of kids crash lands on an uninhabited island. As the time passes, two rival groups emerge, each having a leader with his own view on how to lead.

Ralph’s rule was democratic. He believed that order could be achieved by peaceful negotiations and reasoning. He got the kids to elect him as a chief rather than enforcing his own rule. He attempted to achieve order by performing peaceful talks during his assemblies. For discipline, he relied on his conch: only the person who held it was allowed to speak. He did not force his people to follow the rules, nor did he punish them when a rule got broken.

Jack’s rule, in contrast, was dictatorial. He believed that everybody must strictly follow his orders. Since the very beginning, he was very authoritative, and he wanted kids to obey him right away. Once, Jack went hunting and let the fire out right when a ship passed by. Piggy began accusing him of not getting rescued, and in return Jack decided to demonstrate his power by not giving Piggy any meat. During Ralph’s assemblies, Jack often attempted to speak out of turn, breaking the rule of

Continue for 1 more page »  •  Join now to read essay Lord of the Flies: the Two Political Forces
Download as (for upgraded members)
txt
pdf