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Gary MacLennan wrote:
> 
> In any case, we get the kind of dystopic classic which can safely be
> recommended for generations upon generations of school boys.  In many ways
> Lord of the Flies is the natural successor to Animal Farm./


Lord of the Flies

posted to www.marxmail.org on September 7, 2004

Until sleepiness overcame me last night, I was watching the 1963 
film "Lord of the Flies". It was the first time I had seen it 
since that year when I was a college sophomore. I had also read 
the 1954 William Golding novel it was based on in high school. It 
was an extremely popular book, even more so than "Catcher in the 
Rye". While watching it with jaded Marxist eyes this go round, it 
really impressed me how the book and the film served cold war 
ideological imperatives.

For those who never read the book or saw the film (or the 1990 
remake, which I didn't myself), it is the story of upper-class 
British school boys who end up on a remote island after their 
plane crashes. (In the novel, they are in flight from a nuclear 
war.) After an initial attempt at a kind of cooperative society, 
they eventually degenerate into a kind of caricature of primitive 
society with hunters brutalizing the hunted, both human and 
animal. The message is a distinctly Hobbesian one. Society is a 
jungle.

In an early scene, one of the boys discovers a conch shell on the 
beach which is used to summon the others to a kind of town 
meeting. When you hear him blowing through the shell, you will 
recognize it immediately from the opening musical theme of the TV 
show "Survivor". It is highly likely that Golding's cautionary 
tale influenced the thinking of Mark Burnett, the rightwing, 
ex-paratrooper. Both Golding and Burnett portray human beings as 
cruel and selfish to the point of wantonness. Golding, a devout 
Christian, traced this to Original Sin. Burnett, on the other 
hand, sees aggression as a virtue to be rewarded.

For a high school student like me, Golding's novel reinforced the 
ideas contained in Orwell's "Animal Farm". Human nature is rotten. 
There will always be rulers and ruled. At least with parliamentary 
democracy, there are ground rules to keep our baser instincts in 
check. Furthermore, capitalism could exploit the competitive drive 
to make sure that goods and services matched market demand. In any 
case, socialism would only make things worse.

In what was obviously an ideological choice, Golding, a writer of 
modest talents, won the Nobel Prize in 1983. Graham Greene, a far 
more deserving (and left-leaning) novelist, was expected to win 
the prize that year but was passed over in favor of Golding. 
(Greene never did win the award.)

Golding became deeply pessimistic about humanity after fighting in 
WWII, as understandably he would. "Lord of the Flies" was followed 
by the 1955 "The Inheritors" which depicted the extermination of 
Neanderthal man by Homo Sapiens. Neanderthals are compassionate 
and communal, while the more sophisticated Cro-Magnons are both 
crueler and more advanced technologically. This sounds very much 
like social Darwinism mixed with Calvin.

Nowadays Golding is not much more than a footnote. I doubt that 
there are very many theses being churned out on the novels of 
William Golding. His worldview is very much with us, however. This 
idea that innate human cruelty prevents us from transcending an 
economic system based on private profit is deeply imbedded in art 
and social science.

The Lord of the Flies is an image that is drawn upon frequently to 
illustrate some "senseless" act of cruelty, the latest occasioned 
by a May 10, 2004 Independent editorial on abuse of prisoners in Iraq:

"One accused US female soldier is claiming that no one told her 
about the Geneva Convention. Gee. As a defence, this ranks just 
below the fellow who murdered his parents and then asked for 
leniency because he was an orphan. That soldier and her guilty 
colleagues have defouled and dishonoured a great army, a great 
nation and a noble cause.

"Yet, albeit inadvertently, the girl was making an important 
point. She is not solely to blame for her appalling behaviour. 
Morality is more a matter of custom, habit and the constraints of 
circumstance than we care to acknowledge. When those all break 
down, Lord Of The Flies is never far away."

With all due respect to our good liberal editors in Great Britain, 
the problem is one of profit-driven US imperialism rather than 
human nature.


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