The Myth of Prometheus in the Fiction of William Golding
Datum postavljanja dokumenta
2019Autori
Lončar-Vujnović, Mirjana N.
Šoškić, Radoje V.
Metapodaci
Prikaz svih podataka o dokumentuApstrakt
The following paper strives to clarify the impact that Greek mythology had
on the fiction of William Golding, a Nobel Prize winning author and think-
er. Throughout this paper, we shall adhere chiefly, though not restrictively,
to his first novel and masterpiece Lord of the Flies, expounding the mytho-
logical elements that Golding so masterfully ingrained into his writings so as
to depict the fallen state of the ‘modern’ man. One of the most prominent
myths we shall divert our attention to is the myth of Prometheus as well as its
traces and allusions which can be unearthed in the novels Pincher Martin
and The Double Tongue. Utilizing this myth, and many other myths and lin-
guistic devices, Golding meticulously depicted man’s propensity towards
evil. Golding had no illusions about man’s progression, and thus his novels
focus their attention on the regression.
M kategorija
M14openAccess
M14
openAccess
Kolekcije
Sledeći licencni fajlovi su povezani sa ovim radom: