Tuesday, December 31, 2019

Why Is Lord of the Flies Challenged and Banned

Lord of the Flies, a 1954  novel by William Golding,  has been banned from schools over the years and has often been challenged. According to the American Library Association, it is the eighth-most frequently banned and challenged book in the nation. Parents, school administrators and other critics have decried the language and violence in the novel. Bullying is rampant throughout the book—indeed, it is one of the main plot lines. Many people also think that the book promotes a pro-slavery ideology, which they note is the wrong message to teach children. The Plot   In Lord of the Flies, a plane crash during a wartime evacuation leaves a group of middle school boys stranded on an island. The plot may sound simple, but the story slowly degenerates into a savage survival-of-the-fittest tale, with the boys brutalizing,  hunting  and even killing some of their own. Bans and Challenges The overall theme of the book has led to many challenges and outright bans over the years. The book was  challenged at Owen High School in North Carolina in 1981, for example, because it was demoralizing inasmuch as it implies that man is little more than an animal, according to The Los Angeles Times. The novel  was challenged at the Olney, Texas, Independent School District in 1984 because  of excessive violence and bad language, the ALA states. The association also notes that the book was challenged in Waterloo, Iowa schools in 1992 because of profanity, lurid passages about sex, and statements  defamatory to minorities, God, women and the disabled. Racial Slurs More recent versions of Lord of the Flies have modified some of the language  in the book, but the novel originally used racist terms, particularly when referring to blacks.  A committee of the Toronto, Canada Board of  Education ruled on June 23, 1988, that the novel is racist and recommended that it be  removed from all schools after parents objected to the books use of racial profanity, saying that the novel denigrated blacks, according to the ALA.   General Violence A major theme of the novel is that human nature is  violent and that there isnt any hope for redemption for humankind. The last page of the novel includes this line: Ralph [the initial leader of the group of boys] wept for the end of innocence, the darkness of mans heart, and the fall through the air of the true, wise friend called Piggy. Piggy was one of the characters killed in the book. Many school districts  believe the books violence and demoralizing scenes to be too much for young audiences to handle, according to enotes. Despite attempts to ban the book, Lord of the Flies remains  popular.  In 2013, a first-edition—signed by the author—even sold for nearly $20,000.

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