Innocence Taken Imagine a world where the rules are stripped away, the masks of civility fall, and the true nature of humanity is uncovered. This is the world of William Golding's Lord of the Flies. Where innocence of the mind is not just lost but taken by the very structures meant to uphold it. Indicating a human behavior that in certain scenarios discloses deep truth about the human condition in that corruption can alter relationships, actions, and self-identity to the lure to power furthermore, this draw to power may lead people astray from their moral compass. Which quickly exposes one's humanity being torn apart by the shadows of power that lie waiting for the atrocities of the real world. The narrative concealed between the pages of Golding’s …show more content…
Ralph’s grief signifies the last piece of childhood, dissipating over his eyes. This is a breaking point in his development of character for where he realizes the consequences of the choir's corruption of power, and he witnesses the horrors of mankind's hostility. Unwillingly robbing Ralph of his naveté, this excerpt portrays his loss of integrity from the brutalities of life relating to Zimbardo’s trial of creating an atmosphere of oppression. The loss of innocence is not yielded, but taken by the obscenities of reality. Stanford professor and American psychologist Philip Zimbardo's experiment highlights the journey to the innocence lost in human behavior from the effects of influence on society. They were observed through ordinary college students who, in six days, rapidly descended into barbaric and abrasive guards or distressed, submissive prisoners, illustrating the stark loss of innocence and unveiling how external factors can dramatically alter one's …show more content…
As he begins the experiment to uncover the answers to these questions, his concept slowly assembles itself into a thought-out assertion, that innocence is robbed by the cruelties of life by the corruption of humans who yearn for power. Following the experimentation, the results discovered were equally horrifying and fascinating, as now Zimbardo had the answers. Guards who held power in the experiment chose to mold their character as guards, abusing the power given to them and looking back at themselves in appalachia. But more importantly, the effects on the prisoners. In interviews in the aftermath of the experiment, they questioned how their peers, their equals, the ones they walked side by side to class, could do such atrocious things. Enforcing a new perspective on the world, a quintessential example of the virtue of mankind stripped in six days, how good people given power in a bad place transform and alter the victim’s view of the world altered by their experiences. In Golding's novel Lord of the Flies in Zimbardo's prison experiment, we witness innocence not merely lost but wrenched away by the cruel hands of power and societal