Lord Of The Flies

Discussion in 'U.K.' started by IlUvMuSIc, Oct 1, 2007.

  1. IlUvMuSIc

    IlUvMuSIc Senior Member

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    We're currently reading Lord of the Flies by William Golding and i was wondering what people thought of it. I like it, but thats just me... Anyhoo any thoughts?
    We havent finished though... So like please please no spoliers. Apparently it kills the tension.
     
  2. phoenix_indigo

    phoenix_indigo dreadfully real

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    can you believe (and yes i'm shocked at myself) i have never read this?
    i never even watched the film!

    so well, i'm not much good at responding to this. i really can't believe i've never read it though. *disappointed at self*
     
  3. Peace-Phoenix

    Peace-Phoenix Senior Member

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    It's one of my favourite novels and one of the greater literary influences on my work....
     
  4. lithium

    lithium frogboy

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    I haven't read it since school, but it's still a very vivid memory; I think it was one of the first books that got me interested in the power of literature:)

    The 1963 Peter Brook film version is something of a classic too:)
     
  5. dhARmaMiLlO

    dhARmaMiLlO Member

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    I lived through it at crimean-war millitary boarding school in an old castle in Scotland.
    Can't offer any thoughts on the book besides IT CAN ALL BE TRUE.
     
  6. fountains of nay

    fountains of nay Planet Nayhem!

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    I love this novel. Literary genius! Can't thank my GCSE English teacher enough for teaching us this instead of "Of Mice and Men"!!!!!!!!!!!
     
  7. IlUvMuSIc

    IlUvMuSIc Senior Member

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    So no one has any insight? Anything? Anything at all?
     
  8. Peace-Phoenix

    Peace-Phoenix Senior Member

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    “Kill the Pig, cut his throat, spill his blood”
     
  9. lithium

    lithium frogboy

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    I would approach it as a rejection of Rousseau's conception of the noble savage:)
     
  10. Peace-Phoenix

    Peace-Phoenix Senior Member

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    Although that handles the implicit message of the darkness of man's heart, that we are not inherently good creatures, seeing it as a rejection of Rousseau's conception of the noble savage would blunt its power as a fable reflecting the barbarity of the 'civilised' adult world as well. Perhaps it might be better to see it more as an extention of Hobbes' conception of the state of nature. :)
     
  11. IlUvMuSIc

    IlUvMuSIc Senior Member

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    ohh yeah we had to do about Rousseau and Hobbes, then The Cold War, then we had to do about the brain - Id, Super Ego and the Ego etc...
     
  12. myself

    myself just me

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    Nature vs culture (civilization). Civilized is good... uncivilized is not good. Not the noble savage...
     
  13. Peace-Phoenix

    Peace-Phoenix Senior Member

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    Whilst that's certainly true, I think that misses the most crucial point that the civilised, adult world is every bit as brutal and barbarous as represented by the ship that comes to rescue the boys. A military cruiser in a world at war....
     
  14. CrucifiedDreams

    CrucifiedDreams Members

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    I like the underlying messages, and it was okay, but definitely not one of my favourite books.
     
  15. Peace-Phoenix

    Peace-Phoenix Senior Member

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    You're entitled to that opinion. You're wrong, but it's ok, you're allowed to be wrong in a free society :tongue:
     
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