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Foreshadowing In Lord Of The Flies Social Commentary Essay

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The novel, Lord of the Flies by William Golding, is a story about a group of British school boys that get stuck on an island after they crash on a plane. They are forced to use the resources around them and have to trust each other, and it works out for a while, but while you read on, you begin to recognize a strain between the two main characters, Jack and Ralph, which really spins out of control at the end. William Golding uses British school boys for this novel because those kind of boys are well mannered and don’t seem like the kind of people to turn into uncultured savages. They are expected to have manners and common etiquette. He uses an example of social commentary by using the little ‘uns in the book as not being able to take care of themselves, and that is supposed to represent the society that we live in, that we can’t take care of ourselves without help. Foreshadowing is subtle, uses unimportant details to lead up to the climaxes of the novel, and is the basis of good vs. evil during the novel. Most foreshadowing examples lead up to the bad situations in the book. “He wants to know what you’re going to do about the snake-thing” (Golding 35). This quote is talking about the conversation the group of boys is having about …show more content…

Some of the events that are foreshadowed are not directly related to the important climaxes, but the events that are foreshadowed lead up to or support the main important event that you might have thought would have been foreshadowed. “They found a piglet caught in a curtain of creeper…” (Golding 31) This quote is talking about the first time Jack, Ralph, and Simon all found the first pig that they were going to kill. This is indirectly foreshadows the events that lead up to the Lord of the FLies turning out to be a sow head, which is the key point in the book, because that is what everyone called the beastie or the beast, and that ended up killing Simon later

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