Friday, October 25, 2019
Discuss the pessimism that Golding and Garland present in the novels :: English Literature
Discuss the pessimism that Golding and Garland present in the novels   Lord of the Flies and The Beach. Show how both writers have a pessimistic   attitude to human nature.     Discuss the pessimism that Golding and Garland present in the novels  Lord of the Flies and The Beach. Show how both writers have a  pessimistic attitude to human nature.    Lord of the Flies was written in 1954, a time when commercialisation  was not an issue and media hype only had subtle effects on society.   The Beach was written in 1996, American globalisation had begun and  the media played a massive part in society. The different times  affect the novels in different ways. For example the technological  jargon language used in The Beach is very different to the Standard  English used in Lord of the Flies.    Both novels are similar in some ways yet different in others, although  either way they always have hints of pessimism. One of the ways the  novels are different is genre. The Beach at first seems to be travel  writing, so the reader expects to learn about the journey and culture  of the back-packing land of Bangkok, yet the main character Richard  travels to an isolated island, where there is a lot of different  cultures and races and no one shares the same value systems,  traditions, customs or beliefs so the genre seems shift slightly.    With Lord of the Flies itââ¬â¢s apparent at first that Golding may have  been influenced by the novels Robert Louis Stevensonââ¬â¢s Treasure  Island, Daniel Defoeââ¬â¢s Robinson Crusoe and R. M. Ballantyneââ¬â¢s Coral  Island. All are castawayââ¬â¢s novels. There is a reference to Coral  Island the officer who finds the boys nods ââ¬Å"Jolly good show. Like the  Coral Island.â⬠ Golding wrote Lord of the Flies in 1954 after the war  as a realist answer to The Coral Island. In the 20th century book we  find the same two characters, Jack and Ralph both stranded on an  uninhabited island without adult supervision. Their reaction to  freedom and the unknown is absolutely different from Ballantyne's two  young adventurers. Instead of bringing civilization, they create  chaos, terror and death. The different reaction Goldingââ¬â¢s characters  illustrate a novel for the more mature reader as an adventure novel,  which confounds the readerââ¬â¢s first expectations.    The most obvious resemblance between the novels is the setting and  isolation. Although at first glance the islands seem idyllic, both  writers plant seeds of evil, within the description of the paradise so  cracks can be seen.    In Lord of the Flies personification is used to describe the ideal  setting ââ¬Å"palm fronds would whisper,â⬠ this creates a sense of calm.  Again the image of beauty is shown through the use of a metaphor to    					    
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