Criticism > Contemporary Literary Criticism > Golding, William (Vol. 17) - James R. Baker
Golding, William (Vol. 17) - James R. Baker
JAMES R. BAKER
[Golding] satirizes the Christian as well as the rationalist point of view. In Lord of the Flies, for example, the much discussed last chapter offers none of the traditional comforts. A fable, by virtue of its far-reaching suggestions, touches upon a dimension that most fiction does not—the dimension of prophecy. With the appearance of the naval officer it is no longer possible to accept the evolution of the island society as an isolated failure. The events we have witnessed constitute a picture of realities which obtain in the world at large. There, too, a legendary beast has emerged from the dark wood, come from the sea, or fallen from the sky; and men have gathered for the communion of the hunt. In retrospect, the entire fable suggests a grim parallel with the prophecies of the Biblical Apocalypse. According to that vision the weary repetition of human failure is assured by the birth of new devils for each generation of men…. Each devil...
[The entire page is 335 words long]
Join eNotes
Over 3,500 study guides, question and answer forums, literature criticism, reference content, and much more!
Navigate
- Introduction
- Louis J. Halle
- James Stern
- John Peter
- Norman Podhoretz
- V. S. Pritchett
- Frank Kermode
- Mary Renault
- Peter Green
- C. B. Cox
- Michael Quinn
- Terry Southern
- Frank J. Warnke
- V. S. Pritchett
- Nigel Dennis
- Frank Kermode
- William Barrett
- R. C. Townsend
- Gladys Veidemanis
- James R. Baker
- Christopher Ricks
- J. D. O'Hara
- Harry H. Taylor
- D. W. Crompton
- Roderick Nordell
- David Spitz
- Stanley Cook
- James R. Baker
- P. N. Furbank
- A. C. Capey
- James Acheson
- Ronald Blythe
- Paul Ableman
- John Calvin Batchelor
- Joyce Carol Oates
- Copyright
