I finished reading the book and I feel like I missed something.
It was a super hard read, and I was waiting for it to be over the whole time. But, it wasn't meant to be entertaining, right? It tries to tell you something about society and gives a semi-realistic shipwreck story. In my opinion, it did neither.
First, the realism (this ties into my thoughts on the themes in the book). As the book reached its climax, I found myself sincerely doubting that the writer of the book had ever met a pre-teen, let alone been one. It bothered me how much he was fixated on bloodlust and murder. In a realistic story, the children would not be murdering each other, but dying of starvation or thirst, or exposure.
But the book wasn't really about realism either, so I could have let that slide too if the theme of the story wasn't also completely wrong. William Golding suggests that without society, human nature causes us to be callous and bloodthirsty, and centering society around solving these problems is what causes problems in said society (this is one of the things I may have gotten wrong).
I completely disagree with this theme. Humans are not pre-diposed to hate everyone who isn't part of their in-group, and saying that all humans are fundamentally bloodthirsty for the people they hate is a very weak generalization.
So either I completely misunderstood the theme, in which case I need it explained to me, or I disagree with the theme and I just don't understand enough about the world (or maybe a mix of both!).
Either way, I need help. Thanks in advance!
equal_inequity t1_j231mbl wrote
You're missing that the boys do attempt to organise and create some sort of social order. The point is not that without imposed rules and structure humans are inherently wholly inclined to savagery but rather that humans have natural impulses towards BOTH civilisation AND savagery, and that these impulses necessarily exist in conflict with one another.