Piggy’s glasses represent intellect and the reckless way the boys handle them show how little they value intelligence. From the beginning, intelligence is not valued. Ralph does not respect Piggy nor his intelligence, and the rest of the would rather follow Ralph with his charisma and power and Jack with his aggressive nature. The boys see power and aggression as a way to succeed and ignore how intelligence can improve their society. The boys choose Ralph as their leader because of the power the conch gives him and pay no mind to Piggy, who is going out of his way to be logical and kind.
Timothy Liu: The significance of Piggy's glasses in Lord of the Flies. The Piggy's glasses represent a escape from times where he doesn't want to be notice. On pg 16, "Piggy outside: he went very pinik, bowed his head and clean his glasses again." Another example is on pg 15, He shrank to the otherside of Ralph and busied himself with his glasses."
When Jack broke his glasses, it symbolized a partial destruction of civilization, although one lens was broken, it did not stop Piggy from being intelligent and providing the boys with ideas to survive on the island through Ralph. As the novel progressed, savagery had slowly overcome the intelligence of the boys. In the beginning, Piggy’s glasses represented intelligence and how he saw everything in a different view than the other boys. Even though no one took Piggy seriously, he still managed to get his ideas out through Ralph by being loyal to him and not joining Jack’s tribe. Later on in the Lord of the Flies, Piggy’s specs got damaged by Jack then also stolen by him to create fire for his own tribe.
The Lord of the Flies by William Golding has many symbols within it, but the strongest and biggest symbol is Piggy’s glasses because them being stolen from him marked a significant change in their behaviors from civil to savage and they were the reason the fire was made that led to their rescue. Towards the end of the book, Jack and a few others stole Piggy’s glasses from him with brute force. Not only did this action make Piggy useless, but it gave the most powerful thing on the island to the most corrupt and savage boy. When Jack attacked the shelter, “Ralph and Piggy’s corner became a complication of snarls and crashes and flying limbs,” (Golding 167) proving that Jack was far from civil in his way of obtaining the glasses. This moment
Piggy’s glasses not only represented the decline physically, but also symbolically. Piggy’s glasses’ fate illustrated the decline into savagery, symbolically. Piggy’s glasses symbolized advancement, sight (metaphor for knowledge), civilization, and was the only remaining relic of their former lives. The glasses were used for fire, as a representation of Piggy’s intellect and a symbol
When being stuck on an island with other people, there is a large possibility of so many things going wrong. In William Golding’s, Lord of the Flies, this idea is illustrated throughout the book, from the boys in different ways. Since there is not just one person's fault things did not work out on the island, Piggy’s spectacles, the conch shell, and the signal fire are all part of it. Many things do not work out on the island because of Piggy’s spectacles, the conch, and the signal fire. First, Piggy’s spectacles symbolize intellectualism but led to uncivilization when the hunters stole Piggy’s glasses.
The glasses which represented a form of intelligence was used to the benefit of these boys, since the glasses had been used in a heroic way it can somewhat help interpret intelligence, despite its destruction when they were shattered in a brawl between Ralph and Jake which ultimately ended with the death of piggy.
Piggy could not function if he did not have them and therefore they were used against him by the other boys. The bullies would take his glasses to prove their superiority and to intimidate him. When they realized that Piggy’s glasses were his lifeline, they increased their taunting and reduced his value to the community by preventing him from participating in hunting and other
First, the glasses symbolizes discovery. Piggy is the short, intellectual, guy in the story that wears the glasses. Shortly after he arrived at the island, Piggy and another fellow British boy discover one another and soon become acquaintances. Piggy and Ralph realize that there are other people on the island and need to assemble a meeting in some sort of fashion.
Piggy’s glasses connects to his integrity because he acted like his true self when he had them on. Also as shown here by the way he instantly reacted to Ralph. Ralph was in the pool, while Piggy is on the side of the pool, then Ralph squirts water onto Piggy and laughs. He thought Piggy was going to just let it go and not do anything, but “Piggy beat the water with his hand” onto Ralph (Golding 131). Piggy demonstrates the lesson he learns because if Ralph had done this in the beginning of the book Piggy would 've just taken it or try to ask him to stop.
The first symbolic object is Piggy’s glasses. Piggy’s glasses are a symbolic thing in this story because they give Piggy the ability to see better and makes him see things from different point of views. Piggy’s glasses also give different emotional clues to the way he’s feeling. “Piggy’s glasses were misted again—this time with humiliation.”
Physically, his specs are just a tool to help his impaired vision and to portray him as the most vulnerable of the boys, but there is a lot more meaning to them than just vision advancement. Allegorically, Piggy’s glasses represent his intelligence and civilization on the island. At the beginning of the novel, when he can see clearly with his fixed glasses, the boys are off to a good start by establishing order. However, once his glasses become impaired, the schoolboys actions become questionable, leading them to inhuman chaos. The author expresses, “Ralph made a step forward and Jack smacked Piggy’s head.
As the boys’ discipline fades, the color of the conch also fades, thus showing the fade of order and structure. When the conch breaks at the end of chapter 11, all order is gone and complete chaos arises. Piggy’s glasses are another crucial political symbol in Lord of the Flies. The glasses represent technology as they relate to starting the fire, but since they belong to Piggy, they tend to represent intellectualism as well. Piggy is almost completely blind and is not able to do or see without his glasses.
Lord of the Flies is about a group of British schoolboys stranded on a unoccupied island and rely on the clarity of Piggy’s specs. William Golding uses Piggy’s specs as a symbol of clarity; not only in terms of vision, but the mind as well. Piggy’s specs can also symbolize intelligence and invention. Golding uses symbols to convey his ideas about human nature and its frailties, and Piggy’s specs is one of them. Without his glasses, things gradually became disruptive on the island.
Meanwhile, Piggy is the one person who actually thinks out of everyone else in the group. His glasses may represent intelligence because before Piggy usually speaks, he is cleaning his glasses. Right after