segunda-feira, 18 de abril de 2011

Making Connections (Summative Jornal)

Last Friday our lit circle spent way too long discussing a weak connection between our book, "Lord of the Flies", and the television series "Lost". We've explored that before, but only this time we realized how shallow our comparison would be due to the fact that none of us actually watched more than a few random episodes of the show, hence we could never be thorough enough when trying to explain specific similarities. Never the less we commented at least about the presence of the beast in both the book and the series. While in the book you end up with the conclusion that the beast was pure fear and the evil inside the children's hearts, which was there already just waiting for the stress of the unknown and the despair to trigger it as they start to notice that they lost everything that represented safety for them: "Grown-ups know things (...) They ain't afraid of the dark. They'd meet and have tea and discuss. Then things 'ud be all right-" p. 101; in the series "lost" the approach is much more supernatural and "real" (to the characters), the beast is not a constant doubt, it is a fact. You can see it in the form of a thick black smoke that somehow is able to kill people, and as they say in 'Lord of the Flies' grown-ups tend to be more reasonable and would not be so easily scared without any evidence that their fears are justified, so I guess it was important to have this little change to make what is hunting them concrete enough so they can feel afraid of it. In a smaller note, both stories start with a plane crash with several survivors into an island, which is highly unlikely, since this kind of accident is one of most lethal and having one single person walking out intact would be already too lucky. I could also compare this sense of longing for the adults as a form of protection and even a reassuring presence just for the fact you know they are wiser and have more experience with the book I read a couple of days ago: "Coraline". In this last book Coraline is bored with her life and she is tired of her busy parents never having time for her, even though they work at home. She finds a whole new world behind a door in her own house, where 'another mother' awaits for her. This world is much more interesting and all adults seem to give Coraline their undivided attention all the time, there's only a little unsettling detail, behind that door people have big black buttons instead of eyes. Soon Coraline discovers that she made a terrible mistake not noticing earlier that everything was just too good to be true. Both books are fictional, but Coraline tends to go further in the 'fantastic fiction', while Lord of the Flies is pretty much 'something more likely to happen' in a way because at least it's not in a parallel world. My point with all of this is that although in the specific situation the kids find themselves when stranded in the island, they seem to believe that adult world is safer, that's not always the truth. There are as many degenerated 'Jacks' that are grown-ups as there are younger ones. So when Piggy constantly talks about his "auntie" which is suppose to be the adult opinion about something, it can be just as flawed as any other opinion, of course most of the times it represents the sensible side of adulthood instead of the dark side, since the kids are pretty deep in darkness themselves: "My auntie told me not to run (...) on account of my asthma.". Unfortunately in the end Piggy's sensible voice was forever silenced by a boulder rolled by Roger on purpose, but for the other kids salvation did come in the form of an adult, a naval officer, to be more specific: "We'll take you off. How many of you are there?".Finally, Coraline wasn't so lucky, with her real parents locked away and betrayed by all adults in the 'other world' she could only rely on her own bravery and intelligence to escape, but that's a whole different story, so my comparison ends here.

Nenhum comentário:

Postar um comentário