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Lord Of The Flies Character Analysis

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When placed somewhere new and confusing, filled with unfamiliar sights and sounds, people will desire to make sense of their environment, no matter their previous conditioning as to what is right or wrong. In the novel The Lord of the Flies, young boys are stranded somewhere totally new, both in its physical and social environments, and once civilization is stripped away, a clear dividing line separates those who fight the savagery from those who embrace it. The physical environment of the island greatly impacted the characters and their storylines in The Lord of the Flies. The climate of the island meant that the boys did not need to struggle to stay alive, so they were not unified in the desire to survive. The article The New Psychology of Leadership states “social identity also allows people to identify and act together as group members”(pg.3) If they had needed to focus on staying warm, for example, the boys would have had a group identity in the original tribe. However, the island they crashed on was warm and habitable, so the boys did not have a group identity, until Jack shaped one with his tribe. The island they were on was also inhabited by pigs, so there was an outlet for Jack’s aggression, leading to his increasing tendency to be cruel. Jack was emotionally driven in the beginning of the book, and exercising the power he had through the hunting of pigs only increased that hunger for power, which led to the division of the boys. Jack’s need to be in

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