When I was a high school sophomore it was 1963, my favorite year for English. We read Lord of the Flies, Brave New World, and 1984, all on the ALA Banned Books list. I had no idea how subversive my English teacher was until I read about Banned Books in graduate school over thirty years later.
The novel Lord of the Flies by William Golding tells of a group of prep school boys crashed on a deserted island in the Pacific. One of them, Jack, tries to establish a rough democratic order on the island, but he is overthrown.Within weeks they become tribes of savages preying on each other. One boy is killed, others forced into hiding. At the end they are rescued by naval officers in a destroyer, out searching for them.
The novel portrays a Darwinian view of human nature. The violence and bullying is undeniable, but totally believable. We were neither shocked nor corrupted by the events of the novel. We read other dystopian books, but this one was about boys our age and younger.
Our teacher also assigned us a novel by B.F. Skinner, Walden Two, a true utopian novel. We still believed in the degeneracy of human behavior, because of LOTF, 1984 and Brave New World.
In an informal poll at the end of the year, we voted Lord of the Flies our favorite book. I don’t think we were damaged by the year of thinking dangerously. We were certainly challenged to think about human nature. I hardly remember the books I read in any other year of K-12 schooling.
I’m not sure how often Lord of the Flies is taught anymore. In 1992 the book was challenged in Waterloo, Iowa schools because of profanity, lurid passages about sex, and statements defamatory to minorities, God, women, and the disabled. I don’t remember any of that.
One teacher appeared on an interest group in 2024 to say, “I’ve taught this book many times and I’m still struggling to figure out what the “lurid passages about sex” are. Violence for sure, a little profanity, definitely bullying the kid with glasses, but sex? What on earth are they talking about?” Clarissa Cline
Other challenges aimed at the inappropriate portrayal of human nature
- Challenged at the Owen, N.C. High School (1981) because the book is “demoralizing inasmuch as it implies that man is little more than an animal”;
- The novel was challenged at the Olney, Texas, Independent School District in 1984 because of “excessive violence and bad language.”
I suppose some adults in 1982-82 believed teenagers should be protected from that level of barbarism. They would be shocked by what we can easily view on TV today.
- 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 book’s use of racial profanity, saying that the novel denigrated Black people, according to the ALA https://www.thoughtco.com/lord-of-the-flies-banned-challenged-740596
Probably the use of the “N” word stirred some of the racial accusations, but I recall those as careless slurs, not a theme of the novel. There were no Black children among the survivors of the crash.
If I taught this book today in high school, I would read the first chapter aloud to my class, and they would be hooked. It is one of the best openings of a novel I’ve read. I hope they wouldn’t watch the movie instead, because it is a poor representation. Thank goodness it wasn’t available in 1963, the year of thinking dangerously.