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Why Is Piggy Important In Lord Of The Flies

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Imagine you are a twelve-year-old and you are on an abandoned island with a bunch of kids your age, you have an abundance of great ideas but, because you are not built and muscular no one heeds your advice, that is exactly how the character Piggy felt. First, Piggy has no qualities that kids stranded on a deserted island view as useful. Secondly, all of the character, with the exception of Piggy, adhere the principle of survival of the fittest in order to survive. Finally, Piggy is used to is used to demonstrate the idea that humanity is reliant on power to escalate their country instead of trying to advance their country through science and mathematics. The character, Piggy, is part of a broader spectrum that one might not pick up on the first interpretation of the novel. Piggy has no qualities that kids that young would appreciate so he is ignored through the entire novel. To begin, today in pop culture being a person of a heavier set is viewed as feeble, weak, and incapable of even the simplest of tasks. Also, Piggy is …show more content…

Opening my argument, I would like to explain that in survival of the fittest the only winners are usually the most vicious and forceful that devour the weaker specimens, in this situation the kids follow Jack because he is more vicious than Piggy while Piggy avoids conflict which leaves him vulnerable. Continuing my argument, Jack promises the kids unlimited meat and that they will be stronger than Ralphs’ and Piggys’ group which, in survival of the fittest society, is the ultimate goal. To finalize my argument, the kids in the novel range from the age of five to fourteen, which means that they have no certain idea of how to properly settle rules or how to run even a little system of government. So, on a deserted island with kids who do not know how to properly run a government, the only sense of order is survival of the

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