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Lord of the Flies William Golding’s Masterpiece 1911- 1993
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Lord of the Flies

Jan 16, 2016

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Lord of the Flies. William Golding’s Masterpiece 1911- 1993. Author and Context. William Golding was born on September 19, 1911 in England 1940 Golding joined the Royal Navy Participated in D-Day - PowerPoint PPT Presentation
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Page 2: Lord of the Flies

Author and Context

William Golding was born on September 19, 1911 in England

1940 Golding joined the Royal Navy Participated in D-Day Experience in WWII had a profound effect on his

view of humanity and the evils of which it was capable.

His first and greatest success came with Lord of the Flies (1954)

Page 3: Lord of the Flies

About the Novel

Set in mid 1940’s when Europe engulfed in war.

A plane carrying British school boys is mistaken for a military craft and shot down.

Only the boys survive the crash, and try to form a society and govern themselves.

Page 4: Lord of the Flies

The Island

Page 5: Lord of the Flies

Themes

Civilization vs. SavageryLoss of InnocenceOriginal SinFear that separates one from GodNature of Good and Evil Goodness is rare and fleetingAbsolute Power

Page 6: Lord of the Flies

Allusions

–Reference to a well known “thing” from history, literature, work of art• Classical literature

• Mythology

• Christian Symbolism

Page 7: Lord of the Flies

Symbols in the Novel

The Conch- Piggy’s Glasses-Lord of the Flies-Fire Signal-

Page 8: Lord of the Flies

Religious Symbols The Island . . .The snake in the Garden of Eden The parachutist and Piggy. . . Jack and Ralph . . .Simon . . .

Page 9: Lord of the Flies

Allegory

A work of fiction carrying two levels of meaning:

- 1) a surface plot/narrative (literal)

- 2) symbolic/metaphorical meaning in which everything in story symbolizes

something greater

Page 10: Lord of the Flies

Concerning the TitleBeel’zebub- Hebrew translation for Lord of the fliesThe title is said to be a reference to the Hebrew

name Beelzebub ( זבוב Ba'al-zvuv, "god of the ,בעלfly", "host of the fly" or literally "Lord of Flies"), a name sometimes used as a synonym for Satan.[3]

Ba‘al Zebûb might mean 'Lord of Zebûb', referring to an unknown place called Zebûb, or 'Lord of things that fly' (zebûb being a Hebrew collective noun for 'fly', thus the common lay translation 'Lord of the Flies').

Page 11: Lord of the Flies

Modern Day Allusions

Allusion- (n.) an indirect reference to something

There are many, many modern day allusions to Lord of the Flies in popular culture.

For example….

Page 12: Lord of the Flies

The Simpsons

The Simpson’s episode titled Das Bus is a parody of Lord of the Flies.

Page 13: Lord of the Flies

Survivor

MarK Burnett’s CBS island show is said to have been inspired by LOTF.

Page 14: Lord of the Flies

Sponge Bob Squarepants

The episode Club Spongebob is a spoof of LOTF.

Page 15: Lord of the Flies

Popular Music

Bands such as Taking Back Sunday, Nine Inch Nails, AFI, Iron Maiden, Rolling Stones, and Pink Floyd have written songs about or have alluded to LOTF in their music.

Page 16: Lord of the Flies

We’ll revisit the themes, allusions, symbols, and the concepts of allegory and microcosm upon the

end of the novel.