How Does Golding Use Psychological Allegories In Lord Of The Flies

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Lord of the Flies was written by Willam Golding.The story is about a group of british boys that were on a plane and crashed on an island.By themselves with no adults just kids.The more they stay on the island the more savage like they descend to.Golding uses hints to show us readers that in his story he use some psychological allegories, well the more the story goes on the more of freudian hints pop out and we readers see that the kids on the island show themes of it. Some reasons for why this is a psychological allegorys.Is when Roger threw a rock and missed.”Roger stopped, picked up a stone, and threw it at herry-threw it to missed”(63 Golding).This event shows us that Rogers ego is suppressing that Id.He’s still influenced by rules of the civilized, before the tribe starts and slowly descend to savages.Later on the novel when the kids are wild, and forgot some rules, their tribe has a little chant and do a little dance.”Kill the pig, cut her throat, spill her blood”(58 Golding).This is when the readers see Jack and his tribe slowly descend into savagery and forget the rules of civilization and act more like savages. …show more content…

Cut his throat! Spill his blood!(152 Golding).Jack made and sent a mob to kill the most innocent kid on the island.The more as the reader reads the novel they can see that jack and his tribe are slowly descending into savages and wild and forgot the rules of everything in