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Conflicts In William Golding's The Lord Of The Flies

Decent Essays

“Most people don't listen with the intent to understand, they listen with the intent to reply” (Covey). In other words, there are many conflicts in the world that drives people and things to respond with physical and mental actions. Few actions can be harmful towards anyone and could potentially increase the difficulty of resolving the conflict. However, with many types of conflicts in real-world problems and literature, many become a prime example of what the human or thing is capable of and soon becomes resolved. In the novel, The Lord of The Flies, written by William Golding; man vs. man, man vs. society, and man vs. self, are the conflicts between children that simulate the battles in mankind.

The conflict of “man versus man” has been a prominent conflict for many years between humans throughout current and past problems. These conflicts are built up from the thoughts and emotions that each human possesses inside the mind that expresses their humanity. In the novel, Golding writes, “He’s not a hunter. He’d never have got us meat. He isn’t perfect and we don’t know anything about him” (Golding 98). Jack’s rant is a primary example of how humans can be overwhelmed by jealousy towards the other’s power and breakout with atrocious manners and actions. This emotional burst demonstrates the jealousy that many individuals and organizations seem to encounter once they realize they don't have greater power than the opposing person or organization. Jealousy is a powerful

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