The winner of the 1983 Nobel Prize in
literature, Golding is among the most popular and influential British authors
to have emerged after World War II.
Golding's reputation rests primarily
upon his acclaimed first novel Lord of the Flies (1954), which he
described as "an attempt to trace the defects of society back to the
defects of human nature." A moral allegory as
well as an adventure tale in the tradition of Daniel Defoe's Robinson Crusoe
(1719), R. M. Ballantyne's The Coral Island (1857), and Richard Hughes's
A High Wind in Jamaica (1929), Lord of the Flies focuses upon a
group of British schoolboys marooned on a tropical island. After having
organized themselves upon democratic principles, their society degenerates into primeval
barbarism. While often the subject of diverse psychological, sociological, and
religious interpretations, Lord of the Flies is consistently regarded as
an incisive and
disturbing portrayal of the fragility of civilization.
Golding was born in St. Columb Minor
in Cornwall, England. He enrolled in Brasenose College, Oxford, in 1930,
initially intending to obtain a degree in the sciences. After several years of
study, however, he decided to devote himself to the study of English
literature. He published a volume of poetry, Poems, in 1934 to scant
critical notice; he himself later repudiated the work. Receiving a degree in
English in 1935, he worked in various theaters in London, and in 1939 he moved
to Salisbury, where he was employed as a schoolteacher. He served five years in the Royal Navy during World
War II, an experience that likely helped shape his interest in the theme of barbarism and
evil within humanity. Following the war Golding continued to teach and to write
fiction. In 1954, his first novel, Lord of the Flies, was published to
much critical acclaim in England. He continued to write novels, as well as
essays, lectures, and novellas, throughout the next three decades. Most of
these works, however, were overshadowed by the popular and critical success of Lord
of the Flies.
Golding's Lord of the Flies
presents a central theme of his oeuvre: the
conflict between the forces of light and dark within the human soul. Although
the novel did not gain popularity in the United States until several years
after its original publication, it has now become a modern classic, studied in
most high schools and colleges. Set sometime in the near future, Lord of the
Flies is about a group of schoolboys abandoned on a desert island during a
global war. They attempt to establish a government among themselves, but
without the restraints of civilization they quickly revert to savagery.
Similar in background and characters to Ballantyne's The Coral Island, Lord
of the Flies totally reverses Ballantyne's concept of the purity and
innocence of youth and humanity's ability to remain civilized under the worst
conditions.
While none of Golding's subsequent
works achieved the critical success of Lord of the Flies, he continued
to produce novels that elicit
widespread critical interpretation. Within the thematic context of exploring the depths of human depravity, the
settings of Golding's works range from the prehistoric age, as in The
Inheritors, (1955), to the Middle Ages, as in The Spire (1964), to
contemporary English society. This wide variety of settings, tones, and
structures presents dilemmas to critics attempting to categorize them.
Nevertheless, certain stylistic devices are characteristic of his work. One of
these, the use of a sudden shift of perspective, has been so dramatically
employed by Golding that it both enchants and infuriates critics and readers
alike. For example, Pincher Martin (1956) is the story of Christopher
Martin, a naval officer who is stranded on a rock in the middle of the ocean
after his ship has been torpedoed. The entire book relates Martin's struggles
to remain alive against all odds. The reader learns in the last few pages that
Martin's death occurred on the second page - a fact that transforms the novel
from a struggle for earthly
survival into a struggle for eternal salvation.
Golding's novels are often termed
fables or myths. They are laden with
symbols (usually of a spiritual or religious nature) so imbued with meaning
that they can be interpreted on many different levels. The Spire, for
example, is perhaps his most polished allegorical
novel, equating the erecting of a cathedral spire with the protagonist's conflict between his religious
faith and the temptations to which he is exposed. Darkness Visible
(1979) continues to illuminate the universal confrontation of Good and Evil;
Golding was awarded the James Tait Black Memorial Prize for this novel in 1980.
Throughout the 1980s Golding's novels, essays, and the travel journal An
Egyptian Journal (1985) have received general praise from commentators. Lord
of the Flies, however, remains central to Golding's popularity and his
international reputation as a major contemporary author.
Further Reading
Allen, Walter, The Modern Novel,
Dutton, 1964.
Anderson, David, The Tragic Past,
John Knox Press, 1969.
Authors and
Artists for Young Adults, Volume 5, Gale, 1991.
Axthelm, Peter M., The Modern
Confessional Novel, Yale University Press, 1967.
Babb, Howard S., The Novels of
William Golding, Ohio State University Press, 1970.
Baker, James R., William Golding:
A Critical Study, St. Martin's, 1965.
Biles, Jack I., Talk:
Conversations with William Golding, Harcourt, 1971.
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