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Similarities Between Lord Of The Flies And The Outsiders

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Conflict is inevitable and peace is unreached. No matter how hard one tries there will always be conflict and that is shown in these books. In William Golding’s 1954 novel, Lord of The Flies Ralph and a crew of boys crash onto an island seeking to be saved but eventually make a community similarly in Susan Elliot Hinton’s The Outsiders novel from 1956 Ponyboy and his gang go through many afflictions. Both works assert that conflict should be resolved by non-violent means. This is evident through conflict and setting.

In both The Outsiders and Lord of the Flies the setting certainly aids to the plot of the story. In The Outsiders, while Ponyboy and Cherry are consulting over the differences and similarities in both gangs Ponyboy says that …show more content…

In the beginning, when Piggy and Ralph meet, Golding states “[Piggy’s] lips quivered and the spectacles were dimmed with mist. ‘We may stay here till we die.’ With that word the heat seemed to increase till it became a threatening weight and the lagoon attacked them with a blinding effulgence. ”The mention of “piggy's lips quiver[ing]” invokes fear, as it is an involuntary action. Piggy’s significant fear of the island plays a great role in how the setting is placed. It says “the heat seemed to increase till it became a threatening weight” this uses the tactile sensation of heat in a hyperbole. Golding exaggerates and extends this unbearable heat so much as if it is a threatening …show more content…

The Outsiders is made up of character versus character conflict, with Ponyboy and the greasers against the Socs. Whereas in Lord of the Flies, it is a character versus character but not in groups it is mostly about Jack a Ralph. In the Outsiders, this is evident while the greasers are on the way to the rumble and Steve Randall starts to chant “‘Greaser… greaser… greaser..’ Steve singsonged. “Oh victim of environment, underprivileged, rotten no-count hood ”Steve is using irony to mimic the way greasers are perceived. He says they are underprivileged and rotten no-count hoods. He says this to reclaim power. As if he is saying that he doesn't care what names they call him. Although this chant is positive it also resembles the conflict between the two gangs. It shows the immature names they call each

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