Jack Quotes in Book And Sources – Flashcards

Unlock all answers in this set

Unlock answers
question
Jack as a Political Allegory( Dictator) Quote 1.
answer
"I got the conch" Said Piggy indignantly. " You let me speak!" " The conch doesnt count on top of the mountain" Said Jack," So you shut up." Jack is like a dictator here since he is telling piggy what to do. Pg. 42
question
Jack Loss of Innocence quote 1.
answer
Jack Flushed. "We want Meat" ... The Madness came into his eyes again. .... " You wouldn't care to help with the shelters, i suppose?" " We want meat" " And we dont get it" " But I shall! Next time! I've got to get a barb on this spear! We wounded a pig and the spear fell put. If we could only make barbs-" We see loss on innocence in this quotes because this is the beggining of Jack only caring about hunting and nothing else. Pg.51
question
Jack Loss on Innocence quote 2.
answer
" Rescue? Yes, of course! All the same, I'd like to catch a pig first-" He snatched up his spear and dashed it into the ground. The opaque, mad look came into his eyes again. This quote like the first quote of loss on innocence shows that Jack is now starting to not care about being recused, he just wants to go and kill pigs and not help at all in the effort. Pg. 53.
question
Jack as a religious allegory(Devil) quote 1.
answer
Jack planned his new face. He made one cheek and eye-socket white,the he rubbed red over the other half of his face and slashed a black bar of charcoal across from right eat to left jaw. He looked in the pool for his reflection but his breathing troubled the mirror. .... He looked in astonishment no longer at himself but at an awesome stranger. This quote shows jack as a religious allegory because Jack completely changed his look from a normal school kid to a devil looking mad man . Pg. 63
question
Jack as a religious allegory quote 2.
answer
He began to dance and his laughter became a bloodthirsty snarling . He capered toward Bill, and the mask was a thing on its own, behind which Jack hid, liberated from shame and self-consciousness. .... The mask compelled them. The reader now starts to see how Jack is turning into a devilish figure. His new painted face can now tempt people to do things at his command. Pg.65
question
Jack as a political allegory (Dictator) quote 2.
answer
" Kill the pig, cut her throat, spill the blood' We first hear this when Jack as his hunters kill their first pig. This is a political allegory because Jack leads the group when they chant this and makes them usually say it every time they kill a pig, showing his dominant power. Pg. 69
question
Jack lost of Innocence quote 3.
answer
" You should have seen the blood!" He says this after they kill their first pig and we see now how Jack is not bloodthirsity and this event begins rapid decent to savagery. Pg. 70
question
Jack Loss of Innocence quote 4.
answer
This from Piggy, and the wails of agreement from some of the hunters, drove Jack to violence. The bolting look came into his blue eyes. He took a step, and able to last to hit someone, struck his fist into Piggy's stomach. Piggy sat down with a grunt. Jack stood over him. His voice was vicious with humiliation. " You would, would you? Fatty!" ... Jack smacked Piggy's head. This is the pivotal moment when Jack losses all innocence and turns more to violence. This is the beginning event were Jack is more of a savage than a normal school boy. Pg. 71
question
Jack Loss of Religious Allegory quote 3.
answer
He looked at Piggy, at the hunters, at Ralph. " Im sorry. About the fire, I mean. There. I-" He drew himself up. "- I apologize" Although Jack apologizes its just about the fire. He doesnt even say sorry to Piggy for what he did to him. So we see that Jack doesnt think violence is as bad as other people on the island thinks it is. Pg. 72
question
Jack as a political allegory quote 3.
answer
" But he's he's, Jack Merridew!" " I been in bed so much I done some thinking. I know about people. I know about me. And him. He can't hurt you; but if you stand out of the way he'd hurt the next thing. And that's me. We see here that Piggy and Ralph are starting to fear Jack exactly how a citizen in a dictatorship feels about their leader. Pg.93
question
Jack as a political allegory quote 4.
answer
" He's not a hunter. He'd never have got us meat. He isn't a perfect and we don't know anything about him. He just gives orders and expects people to obey for nothing. All this talk-" Jack shows how he is power hungary like a dictator because he is trying to make Ralph look like a bad chief in order for him to try to take the power away from him and get it for himself. Pg.126
question
Jack as a Political Allegory quote 5.
answer
" Well hunt. I'm going to be chief." They nodded, and the crisis passed easily. This is the first time that Jack starts his savage tribe with him in command giving all the orders. Pg.133
question
Jack as a Religious Allegory quote 4.
answer
" And then-about the beat." They moved, looked at the forest. " I say this. We aren't going to bother about the beast." He nodded at them. " We're going to forget the beast." Jack is using a devil figure like tactic by luring the boys into his group. He does this by getting the remaining boys to like his leadership over Ralph so that people go against Ralph. Pg. 133
question
Jack as a Political Allegory quote 6.
answer
" Well raid them and take fire. There must be four of you; Henry and you, Robert and Maurice. We'll put on paint and sneak up;... Jack now uses his dictator like leadership to make his tribal members listen to his orders and steal Ralphs and the remaining members of the groups fire away from them by sneak attack. Pg.136
question
Jacks loss of innocence quote 4.
answer
Jack made a rush and stabbed at Ralph's chest with his spear.... They were chest to chest, breathing fiercely, pushing and glaring. Jack lost his innocence to the point of attacking a man he respected in the begging. pg. 177
question
Jack as a religious allegory quote 5.
answer
They were savages it was true; We see now from Ralph's side, that Jack twisted the tribes mind like a devil would to the point of making them little savages. pg. 185
question
Jack as political allegory quote 7.
answer
Jack, knowing this was the crisis, charged too. They met with a jolt and bounced apart. Jack swung with his fist at Ralph and caught him on the ear. Ralph hit Jack in the stomach and made him grunt... Jack shows his is like a dictator by showing how he is a powerful leader and does not back down from a fight. Pg. 179.
question
Jack as a religious allegory quote 6.
answer
After Piggy's death and the conch being destroyed " See? See? That's what you'll get! I meant that! There isn't a tribe for you anymore! The conch is gone-" We see that Jack is a true evil man and a devil because he has no remorse over the death of Piggy, and he even makes fun of the terrible death of Piggy and the destruction of the conch. Pg. 181
question
Jack as a Political Allegory quote 8.
answer
Viciously, with full intention, he hurled his spear at Ralph. The pint tore the skin and flesh over Ralph's ribs, then sheared off and fell in the water. Ralph stumbled, feeling not pain but panic, and the tribe, screaming now like the chief, began to advance. Jack shows his ultimate lust for power here when he attempts to kill Ralph with his spear. He tries to show his dominance by taking out the last bit of power on the island. Since he failed he now told his group to charge Ralph in an last attempt to kill him. Pg. 181
question
Character Description of Jack Merridew
answer
The leader of the choir, becomes the leader off the hunters and the instigator of the subsequent chaos. Of all the boys, Jack's position as head choirboy is the closest association in the group to recognized authority. Jack stats this fact in so many words as he nominates himself for the position of leader, won instead by Ralph. A bright boy, Jack depends more on force, violence, and intimidation than on his own wits to usurp Ralph's position as leader. He is the revolutionary that establishes the new world order, so much a repetition of the unwanted order and discipline of the boy's former life at school. Source; Blooms notes; a A contemporary Literary views book.
question
Source Talking about Jack.
answer
Jack's ascendency over the group begins when the children's fears distort the natural objects around them. Twigs become creepers, shadows become demons. Source: Modern Critical Interpretations; Claire Rosenfield.
question
What jacks serves in the book
answer
He serves as a physical manifestation of irrational forces..., he appears almost dehumanized his "nose only a few inches from the humid earth." He is "dog-like" and proceeds forwards "on all fours" "into the semi-darkness of the undergrowth." Source: Modern Critical Interpretations; Claire Rosenfield.
question
Jacks craziness
answer
His eyes seemed " bolting and nearly mad." H e lost his ability to communicate with Ralph on the first day. "He tried to convey the compulsion to track down and kill the was swallowing him up." Source: Modern Critical Interpretations; Claire Rosenfield.
question
Jack being freed of his past when he applies the mask.
answer
At this point he assumes a mask, begins to dance, is finally freed from all the repressions of his past... At the moment of the dance the mask and Jack are one. Source:Modern Critical Interpretations; Claire Rosenfield.
question
Jack starts to destroy the distinctions between animals and men.
answer
Already he has begun to obliterate the distinctions between animals and men, as do primitives; Source:Modern Critical Interpretations; Claire Rosenfield.
question
How Jack gets the rest of the group to change allegiances
answer
The rest of the group, however, shifts, its allegiance to Jack because he has given them meat than something useless like fires. Gradually, they begin to be described as "shadows" or "masks" or "savages" or "demoniac figures" and like Jack, "hunt naked save for paint and a belt."
question
A different character characteristic of Jack Merridew
answer
Ralph's antagonist, Jack is approximately the same age... But although he shows traces of the demagogue from the beginning, he must undergo a metamorphosis from a timidity-shielding arrogance to conscienceless cruelty. Source: Beelzebub Revisited; Lord of the Flies
question
Jack's power.
answer
Jack's reward is power through perception. He perceives almost intuitively the use of mask, dance, ritual, and propitiation to ward off- and yet encourage simultaneously- fear of the unknown. Propitiation is a recognition not only of the need to pacify but also of something to be pacified. In this instance it is the recognition of evil. Source: Beelzebub Revisited; Lord of the Flies
question
Jack's hatred of Ralph. and lust for power
answer
Jacks hatred of Ralph emerges fully. As soon as he ceases to lead and control, Jack turns vicious; and he has clearly begun to hate the boy who bars his leadership. Any possibility of responsible and sane decision on this expedition is sabotaged as Jack insists on turning it into a personal challenge and duel. All that makes sense to him is his own need to control others and impose himself, and hunting, because it is a kind of power assertion. Source: Mark Kinkead-Weekes and Ian Gregor; Lord of the flies.
question
Jack's Leadership
answer
Jack, for his part, is 'brilliantly happy' now that his leadership is assured. Having renounced communal decision, and having no interest in rescue, the idea of a tribe becomes a satisfying way of life... Since a tribe is a power-grouping in a world where strength counts, they believe 'passionately out of the depths of their tormented private lives' that they will dream less as they get nearer to the end of the island where the Fort is sited, and where they can barricade themselves. Source: Mark Kinkead-Weekes and Ian Gregor; Lord of the flies.
Get an explanation on any task
Get unstuck with the help of our AI assistant in seconds
New