A Student-Teacher Companion
Transcription
A Student-Teacher Companion
A Student-Teacher Companion Contents page 2 On William Golding’s Lord of the Flies by De Witt Douglas Kilgore page 5 Lord of the Flies and its Literary Network by Ellen MacKay page 8 Utopias, Dystopias, and Other Social Networks: A Short Tour of their Visualization by Ellen MacKay sidebar: FAST FACTS about Social Networks page 15 Trans-Atlantic Connections: A British Utopia on the American Frontier by Mary Bowden page 19 Name That –Ism: A Quick Glossary of Some Systems of Government page 20 How Would You Rule Your Island? by Shakespeare and Ellen MacKay page 21 From Page to Stage: What Happens When You Make a Novel into a Play? by Ellen MacKay back cover If you liked Lord of the Flies… Some Books Worth Exploring Lord of the Flies Welcome to Lord of the Flies Ellen MacKay, director of Educational Outreach Welcome to the show! Cardinal Stage is delighted to continue its collaboration with the IU College of Arts and Sciences’ Themester with this adaptation of William Golding’s novel, Lord of the Flies. As a meditation on connectedness and its opposite—disconnection or anti-sociality—Lord of the Flies is hard to beat. As De Witt Kilgore writes in the first essay in this student-teacher companion, Golding accepts human beings as animals, limited by nature in terms of what they can achieve in social relations. His core insight, articulated by Simon and understood by Ralph, is that there is a beast in all of us, waiting for its chance. The social play staged by Golding’s lost boys turns their island paradise into a hell on earth. The beast within them undermines any notion that all we need is a better set of rules to make life lovely. Kilgore points out that after Robinson Crusoe (1719), and the long history of patriotic adventure stories that followed in its wake, in which young English boys could be relied on to establish middle-class English homesteads no matter where they were marooned, Lord of the Flies represents a strong antithesis. Informed by “the banality of evil” that Hannah Arendt discerned in Nazi Germany, as well as Golding’s personal observations both as a soldier at the front and a schoolteacher in a British boys’ school, the novel mounts a devastating counter to Rousseau’s claim in The Social Contract that “men always desire their own good, but do not always discern it; the people are never corrupted, though often deceived, and it is only then that they seem to will what is evil.” In light of this year’s focus on Networks, this Companion is written to help you consider why the social structure that links the boys together fails to promote a more acceptable expression of self-governance. Though our first inclination might be to conclude that the ties between the boys were too weak to support a thriving society, the acts of exclusion and bullying that overtake the island are actually representative of a strong but rigid social network, typical of pre-modern epochs or realms dominated by absolute rule and enforced religious conformity. As IU sociologist Bernice Pescosolido writes, societies of this type “provided a sense of security and solidarity, which minimized psychological ‘tensions’ for the majority of individuals. Yet such a structure… limited freedom, individuality, and diversity.” Nor is such a structure an echo of the distant past. Golding’s community of ‘savage’ boys that first bestializes and then hunts its outsiders to extinction is as redolent of our modern moment as it is of seventeenth century Salem. As painful as it may be to admit it, the story remains an allegory for our time. I hope you enjoy the essays that follow, and that you continue to think through the issues raised by Cardinal’s production by seeking out other Themester programming. You will find the calendar here: http://themester.indiana.edu/calendar.shtml Thank you for coming, and please enjoy the production. Ellen MacKay 1 2 Cardinal Stage Company On William Golding’s Lord of the Flies by De Witt Douglas Kilgore “There was indeed no note of discord whatever in that symphony we played on that sweet coral island.” — R. M. Ballantyne, The Coral Island (1857) Portrait of Sir William Gerald Golding by Howard Coster, 1955 The cover of the first edition of Lord of the Flies (1954) What if a group of boys were marooned on an island, separated from their ordinary lives? What if there were no adults to guide and discipline them? What then? Before William Golding’s Lord of the Flies this premise was the foundation of those boys’ adventure novels that followed the lead of Daniel Defoe’s Robinson Crusoe (1719). These stories assumed that any lost boy would be fine: as long as he was English. The youthful adventurer would be sure to tame the island, replicating the goods and luxuries of British middleclass life. If the challenges he faced included dangerous others—like beastly predators, native inhabitants, or pirates— each would be conquered in their turn. The island would be a land of adventure, a school for teaching the “manly” virtues of courage, strength, and leadership. They would play the game in what Martin Green calls the “energizing myth” of Anglo-American dominance over any other land or people. Lord of the Flies is an effort to demolish that myth and to set in its place a “realistic” account of the human nature it ignores. Thus the novel mounts a parody of the boys’ stories that were a large part of Golding’s own childhood reading. The book also casts a cold eye on the Victorian institution of virtuous and innocent childhood, seeking to replace it with an account of “what boys are really like.” Since Golding was a teacher at an all-boys’ grammar school, he knew his subject. The story is, therefore, also an anthropological thought experiment. The reaction of the novel’s lost boys to their isolation from the rule of schools, police and other adults is carefully observed. William Gerald Golding was born to a middle-class English family in 1911. His parents belonged to that stratum of British intellectual life that championed scientific materialism and sought political reform through socialism and women’s suffrage. Golding graduated from Oxford University in 1935 Lord of the Flies and served as a lieutenant in the Royal Navy during World War II. It was the latter experience that prompted him to shed the progressive optimism he learned from his parents. The post-war flow of images and stories from the extermination camps of Nazi Germany, in particular, revealed to him a “human nature [that is] savage and unforgiving.” Lord of the Flies is his most memorable effort at sharing this insight, the result of his own particular coming of age in the mid-twentieth century. This background explains the novel’s anti-utopian character. Golding accepts human beings as animals, limited by nature in terms of what they can achieve in social relations. His core insight, articulated by Simon and understood by Ralph, is that there is a beast in all of us, waiting for its chance. The social play staged by Golding’s lost boys turns their island paradise into a hell on earth. The beast within them undermines any notion that all we need is a better set of rules to make life lovely. That beast, however, is of a very specific kind. In his audio recording of the novel Golding is moved to account for why his island has excluded girls. Firstly, it made sense for him to write from his experience as a boy. Secondly, he felt that any group of boys would represent civilization in miniature, unlike any set of girls. He excuses this opinion on the grounds that women are “far superior” to men and, therefore, cannot represent civilization. The writer further argues that a mixed cast of girls and boys would introduce “sex.” This would be “too trivial a thing to get in with a story like this which is about the problem of evil and about the problem of how people are to live together in society.” Golding’s island is a thought experiment that deliberately strips away any noise that would compromise his results. The author’s presumption that his lost boys can stand for all humanity, illustrates that Golding’s experiment says both less and more. The story offers less a complete theory of the human condition and more a cautionary tale for a nation on the brink of losing its empire, made fearful by the threat of nuclear war. It is the swan song of a ruling class that believed women and people of other races were marginal to cultural production. Lacking the diversity essential to any functioning society, Golding’s boys must fail, and so they do. Golding is certainly aware that his design is reductive (there are no grown-ups after all) but we can make more of what its presuppositions mean than he could.1 I argue that this story is about fear of the other; the creature that has been excluded and now goes bump in the night. Golding never Illustration of Daniel Defoe’s Robinson Crusoe allows us to forget that there are no other people on the island, only by E. Boyd Smith, 1924. For an excellent the boys themselves. But they are enough. They forget many things collection of images of this tale see Pictureing the First Castaway, a website at the following during their island sojourn but they do remember to divide the world address: www.camden.rutgers.edu/Camden/ between them and us, between we hunters and those beasts (whether Crusoe/Pages/crusoe.html 1 However, having graduated from a Catholic all-boys’ school with elite pretensions, I must admit that Golding is right in detail even if wrong in broad outline. His years as an English teacher at Bishop Wordsworth’s Church of England Grammar School for Boys did show him what boys are really like. 3 4 Cardinal Stage Company animals or people) to be hunted. Having no natives to conquer or civilize (like Crusoe’s Friday), no pirates against whom to measure their courage, they fall upon themselves. If we must take Lord of the Flies as symptomatic of human nature then this is the place to start. The insight that Golding shares is quite bleak; the boys’ island does reflect the adult world in that it does produce enemies that must be humiliated, propitiated or killed. Over all hangs the shadow of a war-making capacity that outruns rational thought. As nuclear war devastates the outside world, Jack’s tribe sets fire to the island to flush Ralph out. The inferno is a mutually assured destruction. The boys are saved from the consequences of their actions only when the Naval officer’s appearance stops the hunt. Golding’s insight here is that in seeking to destroy its others humanity can only destroy itself. As Walt Kelly’s Pogo would say: “We have met the enemy and he is us.” I have shared with you my own reading of Golding’s great work. I would like, however, for him have the last word: “ … the only interpretation of the story, if you want one, is your own: not your teacher’s, not your professor’s, not mine, not a critic’s, not some authority’s. The one thing that matters is first, the experience of being in the story, moving through it, then any interpretation you like. If it is yours, then that’s the right one. Because what’s in a book is not what an author thought he put into it, Plaque on the Bishop Wordsworth CE it is what the reader gets out of it.” In that spirit, let the School commemorating the fact that William Golding taught there. play begin. De Witt Douglas Kilgore is an Associate Professor of English and American and Cultural Studies at IU, and author of Astrofuturism: Science, Race and Visions of Utopia in Space (2003). Professor Kilgore’s current research includes work on popular narratives emerging from the search for extraterrestrial intelligence (SETI) and an investigation of the role science plays in validating the political and theological positions in Philip Pullman’s His Dark Materials. Lord of the Flies Lord of the Flies and its Literary Network By Ellen MacKay “The rules!” shouted Ralph, “you’re breaking the rules!” “Who cares?” — William Golding, Lord of the Flies Golding’s book is a particularly fine example of a literary subgenre that is enjoying a renaissance, particularly in the area of young adult fiction: the dystopian novel. One of the most popular entries in this category is Suzanne Collins’s Hunger Games trilogy (2008-2010), which has the distinction of being written by an IU alumna (BA 1985, theatre and telecommunications). Other important examples include Lois Lowry’s The Giver (1994), and Paolo Bacigalupi’s Ship Breaker (2010), both of which have earned a lot of popular and critical praise. But Lord of the Flies, which undoubtedly influenced Collins and her cohort, dates from 1955, a Cold War moment that came more than fifty years earlier, in which the threat of totalitarian politics and nuclear annihilation (often called mutually assured destruction, or MAD for short) were vivid and pressing cultural concerns. To Golding, as well as to many writers and thinkers of his age, the world seemed to be caught in a dangerous dilemma. The genocides undertaken by Nazism, on the far right, and Stalinism, on the far left, were vivid demonstrations of the evil that authoritanian government could do. And yet opposition to this politics was itself incredibly risky. The razing of Hiroshima and Nagasaki illustrated the catastrophe that could result if international military force were once again employed to orchestrate regime change. (The founding of the CIA, and the turn to a foreign policy based on surveillance instead of confrontation, was one result of this widely-feared threat. Hence the rise of the spy novel, and the birth of such immortal literary characters as George Smiley, Jack Ryan, James Bond, and Jason Bourne. But that’s the story of another literary network). In its combined interest in authoritarianism and post-apocalypticism, Lord of the Flies rubbed shoulders with some of the most famous fiction of its period: Shirley Jackson’s short story, “The Lottery” (1948), George Orwell’s Nineteen Eighty-Four (1949), Ray Bradbury’s Fahrenheit 451 (1953), and Nevil Shute’s On the Beach (1957). But despite the apparent topicality of the subgenre (its focus a particular set of contemporary conditions, or contexts) its story doesn’t start here. Writings about possible worlds have existed for millennia. Though the first exercises in this genre described utopias (ideal, imagined societies, derived from the Greek word for no-place); but in the last two-and-a-half centuries, dystopias (imaginary places or conditions in which everything is as bad as possible), have become the more common subject. The following pictorial essay is an attempt to sketch out a genealogy of utopian and dystopian literature, from Plato to Suzanne Collins. Its purpose is to encourage you to think about the way works interconnect. This kind of visualization of literary influence makes an implied claim that books are like people: they have a parentage, and they beget heirs. Such a notion can provide us 5 6 Cardinal Stage Company a useful way of working out the transmission of shared traits across time. But it is also important to think about how a given culture shapes its literary output. Like a family tree, a literary genealogy is useful for thinking about inheritance, but not so great at bringing out the effects of environment. Moreover, in this scheme, dystopias look like a genetic anomaly—an ugly branch of the utopian family tree. Is that a fair assessment? You be the judge. Gulliver’s Travels by Jonathan Swift (1726) “Ingratitude is amongst them a capital crime, as we read it to have been in some other countries: for they reason thus; that whoever makes ill-returns to his benefactor, must needs be a common enemy to the rest of the mankind, from where he has received no obligations, and therefore such man is not fit to live.” Lord of the Flies by William Golding (1954) “We did everything adults would do. What went wrong?” Herland by Charlotte Perkins Gilman (1915) “When we say men, man, manly, manhood, and all the other masculine-derivatives, we have in the background of our minds a huge vague crowded picture of the world and all its activities. . . . And when we say women, we think female—the sex.” Utopia by Thomas More (1516) “[how can anyone] be silly enough to think himself better than other people, because his clothes are made of finer woolen thread than theirs. After all, those fine clothes were once worn by a sheep, and they never turned it into anything better than a sheep.” Utopia The Time Machine by H. G. Wells (1895) “Face this world. Learn its ways, watch it, be careful of too hasty guesses at its meaning. In the end you will find clues to it all.” The Republic by Plato (c. 370 BCE) “Bodily exercise, when compulsory, does no harm to the body; but knowledge which is acquired under compulsion obtains no hold on the mind.” Lord of the Flies Brave New World by Aldous Huxley (1932) “But I don’t want comfort. I want God, I want poetry, I want real danger, I want freedom, I want goodness. I want sin.” The Hunger Games, by Suzanne Collins (2008) “Destroying things is much easier than making them.” Do Androids Dream of Electric Sheep? by Philip K. Dick (1968) Nineteen Eighty-Four by George Orwell (1949) “The choice for mankind lies between freedom and happiness and for the great bulk of mankind, happiness is better.” A Clockwork Orange by Anthony Burgess (1962) “Emigrate or Degenerate.” “Is it better for a man to have chosen evil than to have good imposed upon him?” Dystopia Ellen MacKay is Associate Professor of English at Indiana University. She specializes in Shakespeare, Renaissance Drama, Theatre History and Theories of Performance and has written a book on all these subjects: Persecution, Plague and Fire: Fugitive Histories of the Stage in Early Modern England. 7 8 Cardinal Stage Company Utopias, Dystopias, and Other Social Networks A Short Tour of their Visualization By Ellen MacKay “What are we? Humans? Or animals? Or savages?” — William Golding, Lord of the Flies Long before the term “the social network” was coined, artists depicted social systems in order to make evident their chief structural characteristics. The following illustrations reveal the long history of visualizing the complexity of social relations. They also help us to recognize the structural differences between different forms of social organization, from the family to the state (whether real or imagined). 1. The Family Tree Used to depict the “origin, lineage and kinship of noble families,” this blank family tree illustrates the exponential increase in descendent over four generations. This type of illustration has been used for centuries in cultures that operate dynastically—by transmitting wealth, land, and power from first-born son to first-born son (until recently, daughters have only been acceptable as a last resort). Absolute monarchies generally operate this way. A sure sign of dynastic rule is the naming of historical epochs according to the surname of the ruling family. For instance, the English crown has passed from the Lancasters to the Yorks to the Tudors to the Stuarts all the way to the present-day Windsors. One interesting feature of the family tree is that it doesn’t illustrate a social hierarchy very well; because it is designed to include all members of a clan who share a bloodline, who is on the bottom and who is on the top doesn’t signify anything beyond the passage of time. H. A. Pierer, the “Ascending Family Tree” in The Universal Lexicon (an encyclopedic dictionary). Lord of the Flies 2. The Pyramid This pyramidal illustration, on the other hand, provides a very clear indication of the unequal distribution of power. The zombies on the top represent the apex of the food chain—they eat without ever being eaten. The vegetation on the bottom represents the opposite circumstance: it is widely eaten, but never eats. This type of visualization is great at conveying hierarchy, since the top represents supremacy and the bottom total subjection to the eat-or-be-eaten environment. The pyramid also insinuates a very low degree of contact across the social strata. Those on top stay on top, and those on the bottom stay on the bottom, unnoticed by the zombie overlords. The result in this case is clearly dystopian—that is, it represents the worst of possible worlds. No surprise, since we are looking at a visualization of the zombie apocalypse. The Zombie Food Chain, illustration by Olly Moss 3. The Circles of Hell This representation of Dante’s Inferno (1302)—again, pretty much the worst place imaginable— shares a peaked, or in this case, a funnel-shaped structure. Dante’s hierarchy of sins is meticulously arranged from least to worst: we progress from Limbo, where virtuous pre-Christians await their redemption at the Last Judgment, to the ninth circle, where Judas Iscariot suffers eternally for being the worst sinner of all time: the betrayer of Jesus Christ (he shares his fate with Brutus and Cassius, the betrayers of Julius Caesar). It is perhaps surprising that Dante’s map of Hell looks a lot like contemporary representations of Heaven, but in reverse. But the symmetrical geometry of this arrangement assigns the universe a divine harmony—or intelligent design—that was fundamental to the medieval and Renaissance world view. By the twentieth century, the map changes. In Lord of the Flies, the Island turns into a Hell that looks quite different from this one. Fourteenth century woodcut of Dante's inferno, courtesy of the Vatican Library. 9 10 Cardinal Stage Company 4. The Spheres of Heaven In this illumination from a manuscript (or hand-written) calendar of prayers, the Holy Family sits at the top of a hierarchy of angels. This representation of paradise is typical of its time in that it reproduces the subtle but rigorously enforced pecking order of a royal court. While we might not be able to identify any obvious distinction between the Seraphim in the first sphere and the Archangels in the third sphere, it is clear that each type of angel must keep to its kind, and that each kind is defined by its proximity to God. While this illustration places God at the zenith, or high point, of a vertical axis, it also worth noticing that it puts God at the center of a circle; the various grades of angels occupy concentric spheres (that’s why you see that arc of angels above the Holy Family’s head). This circular structure adds lateral ties to the vertical axis of divinity, and suggests egalitarianism within ranks (the story of King Arthur’s round table is a good example of the circle’s more democratic arrangement of people in social space). Matfré Ermengau of Béziers, “The Nine Choirs of Angels surround Jesus, God the Father, and Mary” from the Breviary of Love, last quarter of the 14th century, Spain. 5. Links in a Chain Robert Fludd’s illustration of the Great Chain of Being—the Elizabethan philosophy that every person or thing occupied its own special link in the hierarchy of God’s creation—demonstrates the difficulty of reconciling circular and vertical paradigms in one image. At the top of the image is a cloud, representing God, linked to the female form of Sophia, or wisdom. She is in turn linked to the sciences and arts, which are ringed by the Minerals, Vegetables and Animals, which are then orbited by the planets, the sun and the moon. Within any of these rings, it is hard to indicate the position of any particular constituent. For instance, Fludd thought man the highest order of animal and fish the lowest, but the conditions of superiority and inferiority are a poor fit within a circle or sphere. Precisely because of this limitation, concentric circles have been recognized as a particularly effective way to represent the social structure of premodern cultures—cultures in which roles are quite fixed and the groups to which individuals belong are all located on the same hierarchy. As the sociologist Georg Simmel explains in his 1955 book, Conflict and the Web of Group Affiliations: Lord of the Flies 11 FAST FACTS about Social Networks: Definitions Excerpted from Bernice Pescosolido (IU Distinguished Professor of Sociology) “The Sociology of Social Networks” in The Handbook of 21st Century Sociology The individual’s relation to society is a chicken-or-egg scenario: “Society arises from the individual and the individual arises out of association.” (Simmel, 1955 p. 163) “Individuals are neither puppets of the social structure nor purely rational, calculating individuals.” (210) Network ties are not universally good: Social interactions can be positive or negative, helpful or harmful. They can integrate individuals into a community and, just as powerfully, place stringent isolating regulations on behavior. (210) More ties aren’t necessarily better: As Durkheim (1951) pointed out, too much oversight (regulation) or support (integration) can be stifling and repressive. (211) Robert Fludd, The Great Chain of Being, in Utriusque Cosmi ca. 1617-1621 a premodern man could be a member of a guild, which in turn was part of a wider confederation of guilds. A burgher may have been a citizen of a particular town and this town may have belonged to a federation of towns, such as the Hanse. An individual could not directly join a larger social circle but could become involved in it by virtue of membership in a smaller one. Simmel contrasts this structure to the modern social environment, in which people form multiple connections, some of which may overlap and some of which may conflict with each other. Modern man’s family involvements are separated from his occupational and religious activities. This means that each individual occupies a distinct position in the intersection of many circles. The greater the number of possible combinations of membership, the more each individual tends toward a unique location in the social sphere. Although he may share membership with other individuals in one or several circles, he is less likely to be located at exactly the same intersection as anyone else. Strong is not necessarily better than weak: “Strong” ties are not necessarily optimal because “weak” ties often act as a bridge to different information and resources (Granovetter 1982), and holes in network structures (Burt 1980) provide opportunities that can be exploited. (211) The influence of one social network can be counteracted by another: “Family, peer, and official school-based networks, for example, may reinforce messages or clash in priorities for teenagers.” (210) Social networks are constantly changing: Networks across all levels are dynamic, not static, structures and processes. (211) There is not a fixed method for identifying and tracking social networks: “deciding which kinds of social networks are of interest, how to elicit the ties, and how to track their dynamics remain critical issues. (211) Social networks impact your health: Cardiologists know this. (212) Social ties are not always consciously chosen. Genetics, personality and biology determine what ties we forge. (217) SOME KEY TERMS: Sociogram: the bubble and string visualization of a social network, for example: Node, atom, actor, unit: the entity that forms and sustains a social relationship. This may be an individual, but it could also be a family, an organization, a nation, or any other social group. Tie, link, relationship: the connections noted and measured are called social ties. Isolate: a unit that has no ties to a social structure. Holes: sites in a network in which there are few or no connections. 12 Cardinal Stage Company 6. Dots and Strings An important branch of sociology researches and illustrates these complex modern attachments, often by depicting them as sociograms (a sociogram is a diagram consisting of nodes and lines that represent the relationships within a group). This sociogram of Shakespeare’s Hamlet illustrates the isolation that can result from the uniqueness of a modern individual’s social role. Notice how Hamlet’s two principal social circles fail to overlap, leaving him alone and stuck between two worlds. Sociogram of Hamlet, in Alan J. Daly, “Data, Dyads, and Dynamics: Exploring Data Use and Social Networks in Educational Improvement” Teachers College Record, 2012. The terms in the bubbles are those that sociologists use to describe the characteristics of a particular network. 7. Concentric Circles Because they promise a shared experience, very different from the detachment that Hamlet suffers, Simmel’s symmetrical, concentric patterns tend be the starting point of utopian societies. The planned city of Palmanova, built on the outskirts of Venice in the last decade of the sixteenth century (construction began in 1593), was designed and constructed to look like an earthly paradise: a central, organizing figure of authority (housed in the tower in the middle of the star) surrounded by a community whose members are connected by open and easy-to-navigate roads. Though the experiment was a failure (no one wanted to leave Venice for this early effort in planned living), it demonstrates the close ties between the archeological mapping of a society and the social experience it aims to orchestrate. Anonymous, the Map of Palmaviva, in Civitates Orbis Terrarum, 1572-1680 Lord of the Flies 8. Targets and Stars The distinct, star-shaped plan of Palmaviva is therefore evoked in this early example of a target-shaped sociogram, in which the connections forged across the concentric circles of a classroom’s social structure look a bit like a star. Sociogram of a First-Grade Classroom, in M. L. Northway, A Primer of Sociometry, 1952. 9. Islands as Utopian Social Planning Maps are therefore a useful way for utopias to convey their social values—we can think of them as sociograms translated onto imagined landscapes. In the frontispiece to Thomas More’s Utopia, the island shares the eye-pleasing symmetry and concentric structure of Palmanova’s design—in fact, Palmanova was designed with More’s plan in mind. We should consider, then, what the topography of Golding’s island might tells us about the world of Lord of the Flies. Sir Thomas More, colorized “frontispiece of Utopia, 1516. 10. Islands as Dystopian Social Planning Perhaps its mountain top will remind us of the zombie food chain, or of Dante’s inferno, which is more or less a volcano flipped upside down (it’s useful to know that the title, Lord of the Flies, is taken from the Old Testament, where it describes the devil). Perhaps the decidedly asymmetrical, Illustration of the Island, posted on the teacher’s blog: http://watsonwork.wordpress.com/2012/01/page/2/ 13 14 Cardinal Stage Company uncentralized and haphazard distribution of locations will exacerbate the detachment of some survivors of the plane crash from others. Or perhaps the rigid, single circle that encloses all of the boys closes down any opportunity for individualism. In such a tightly controlled, pre-modern culture, those who don’t fit within the social structure are liable to suffer exile or even death. Model of the set for Cardinal Stage Company’s production of Lord of the Flies, designed by Mark Smith. Teachers Consider having your students draw a sociogram of the Island community in Lord of the Flies (since the shape of its social structure changes, you might assign different groups the task of representing it at different key moments). Invite your students to take their cues from the maps and illustrations included in this essay. See http://mrshrin.blogspot.com/2013/05/how-to-create-sociogram.html for some great examples of student work of this type. (A Google search for “sociogram and literature” will take you straight to the blog post on sociograms for “Mrs Hrin’s Class.” ) Lord of the Flies Utopian and dystopian experiments are not limited to fiction or philosophy. There is a long and fascinating history of utopian societies founded by idealists, zealots, revolutionaries and swindlers. One of them can be found quite close to home. In this essay, Kristen Bowden, a PhD candidate in IU’s English department and former high school teacher, discusses her research on New Harmony, Indiana, and the social experiment in utopian governance that it represents. Students, teachers, and all others who find this material compelling will be glad to know that the archives at the Lilly Library are open to all members of the community to explore. Bowden’s findings are also beautifully curated in an online exhibit at the Lilly, which you can find at the following web address: www.indiana.edu/~liblilly/digital/exhibitions/exhibits/show/ashton/sec4 Trans-Atlantic Connections: A British Utopia on the American Frontier by Mary Bowden, PhD student in English, Indiana University “We’ve got to have rules and obey them. After all, we’re not savages. We’re English, and the English are best at everything.” — William Golding, Lord of the Flies In 1834, William Ashton and a small group of followers left their home in the great industrial city of Manchester, England. The group travelled across the Atlantic Ocean to America, took passage on a half-built railway west, and finally followed a series of rutted dirt roads to what was then America’s northwestern frontier. Their destination was a site near Mount Carmel, Indiana, where they planned to found a utopian community. Ashton’s group, which called itself the Manchester Social Community Company (or MSCC) was not unique. Nineteenth-century America attracted a wave of British utopian movements, which were drawn both by the country’s reputation for religious freedom and by its abundance of cheap land. Utopian emigrants tended to settle on the fringes of American civilization: British-born Mother Ann Lee brought her Shaker community to the frontier of upstate New York; the English schoolmaster Thomas Hughes established the town of Rugby, a refuge for the property-less second sons of aristocratic families, in a remote part of Tennessee; and Welsh social reformer Robert Owen settled his utopian Philosophical beliefs: This document details the community in rural New Harmony, Indiana. The American “Objects and Views” of the early company. 15 Cardinal Stage Company 16 Timeline 1832 – William and Whiteley Ashton form the Social Co-Operative Community, soon to be renamed the Manchester Social Community Company (MSCC). 1834 – Ashton and a small group of emigrants travel from Manchester, England, to Mount Carmel, Indiana. frontier’s special attraction for British utopians was likely due in large part to the availability of affordable land there. The characteristics of this land were likewise important to emigrants. Frontier lands were distant from large cities and the worrisome temptations that they might present to utopian community members. Also – and perhaps most importantly for the purpose of the MSCC – the frontier presented the opportunity to begin life anew in a seemingly 1835 – The American branch of the MSCC purchases land. The British branch becomes anxious about the untouched wilderness. endeavor, as communication from the American Ashton and his followers had left England because they were branch is infrequent. distressed by the environmental devastation caused by Britain’s 1836 – Defections occur in the American branch, and burgeoning Industrial Revolution. In one of many extracts copied support falters in Britain. Whiteley and William Ashton decide to dissolve the MSCC. by Ashton before his plan to leave England was fully-formed, he described a vision of a former England, in which “her vallies [were] green with verdure.” He describes a morning stroll, “I had beheld the sun smiling upon the fruitfulness, and the rains of heaven descending and bringing forth in abundance... the crops of the earth” (Ashton mss.) Against this description of England as a pastoral paradise, however, lay the bleak reality of nineteenth-century Manchester: grey, smoggy, and industrial, where people worked in factories and had little contact with fields, crops, or verdant valleys. Ashton’s near-contemporary, the poet William Blake, described a similar scene in his poem “The New Jerusalem,” in which “dark Satanic mills” cover “England’s mountains green” (Blake 233). Although he believed that the process of industrialization had obscured the earth’s beauty in England, Blake suggests at the end of the poem that this process can be reversed: the British can begin again and build “Jerusalem” anew (Blake 234). Ashton’s actions echo Blake’s admonition, but with a change of scene. Blake saw England transformed back into the pastoral paradise it used to be, while Ashton and his followers focused on the Indiana frontier as the place to build their utopia, or version of “Jerusalem.” Land deed: This land deed is executed in William Ashton ‘s name, although the community planned to hold all lands in common. Stock card: The MSCC sold stock cards to fund the journey of some emigrants to America. Lord of the Flies Ashton and the MSCC’s choice to settle near Mount Carmel demonstrates the influence of contemporary British thinking about the American frontier environment. Travelers noted the lack of middle-class comforts, from reliable railroads to regular meals. This spoke to the remoteness of the frontier from all that was familiar – and so lent weight to the idea that one went to the frontier in order to leave behind old ways. The look of the land was also de-familiarizing: in her 1832 book, the British traveler and writer Fanny Trollope describes being frightened by the “dungeon forest” of trees growing very closely together, while in 1842 Charles Dickens was distressed by the long, barren aspect of the Looking Glass Prairie in Missouri (Trollope 77, Dickens 202.) But even when the wilderness of the American frontier frightened or disturbed them, British writers about the frontier also glimpsed the potential which lay in its wildness. Ashton and the MSCC, as well as other groups of utopian emigrants, saw in the dense forests and empty prairies a place which was “primeval” and “untouched”: waiting to be cultivated or tamed by them. Settling in the wilderness, for Ashton and his followers, was like settling in an Eden. They believed the American frontier was a paradise preserved for those bold and enterprising enough to begin the world anew. Viewing a place as a paradise from abroad is different from transforming the wilderness into a utopian community, however. Only a small part of the MSCC had emigrated to the frontier. The rest of the Company remained in England, raising funds to support the American branch of the enterprise. At the beginning of the endeavor, the American and British branches shared a desire to transform the wildness of the land into a pastoral vision of pre-industrial Britain. The English branch was eager to mail the American MSCC British plants: rose-currant bushes and gooseberry trees, as well as seeds for the varieties of vegetables typically grown in Britain (Ashton mss.) Their actions suggest an (unspoken) motivation to make the Indiana frontier look like an English garden; in this way, they would create pre-industrial Britain anew, abroad. Letter from England: This letter from Whiteley Ashton and other members of the British branch of the MSCC conveys the news from Britain, and also urges the American branch of the MSCC to write more frequently. 17 18 Cardinal Stage Company But as the months passed, it became clear that the distance between the two branches strained their relationship. Infrequent and unreliable mail service on the frontier made the distance between them seem even greater. William Ashton’s brother Whiteley, who remained in England and was the chief correspondent for the British branch, explained to his brother that the lack of steady communication was making British members “low-spirited and uneasy.” At times the silence between the two countries stretched for so long that the British branch feared something terrible had happened to their American brethren (“in fact we almost thought you must be dead,” Whiteley wrote his brother in a letter from May 5, 1835) (Ashton mss.) While the British branch was frustrated by Cloth design: This design by William Ashton – likely for cloth manufactured by the infrequent correspondence, the American branch firm of Sawyer & Brackett – shows his continued interest in natural motifs. faced desertion by some of its members, who took with them deeds to tracts of land which the Company had purchased in common. As support from England faltered and the American branch faced defections, the Ashton brothers decided in 1836 to dissolve the MSCC altogether. Like many other trans-Atlantic utopias, the Ashtons’ plan for transforming the Indiana frontier into an English pastoral had withered. Postscript The story of the MSCC is a story of connections: between England and America, the present-day American frontier and England’s past, wilderness and civilization, and finally between brothers and branches. In a proof of the strength of family ties, the Ashton brothers chose to become even closer after the collapse of their utopian venture. Whiteley joined William Ashton in the Midwest, and together the two became traveling cloth salesmen for the Cincinnati firm of Sawyer & Brackett. Ashton’s interest in the wilderness had a second life in some of his cloth designs for the company, which featured intricately-drawn flowers. Ironically, the Ashton brothers had tried to flee the industrial era in Britain, but their work selling cloth in America helped promote the beginnings of the industrialization of the American frontier. Bibliography Ashton, William.† MS 1820-1849.† Lilly Library, Bloomington, Indiana. Blake, William. “The New Jerusalem.”† Immortal Poems of the English Language.† Ed. Oscar Williams. † New York: Pocket Books, 1952.† 233-234. Dickens, Charles. Ed. Patricia Ingham. American Notes for General Circulation. London: Penguin, 2004 (1842). Trollope, Fanny. Domestic Manners of the Americans. Ed. Pamela Neville-Sington. London: Penguin, 1997 (1832). Williams, Raymond. The Country and the City.† Oxford: Oxford University Press, 1973. Mary Bowden is a PhD student in the English Department at Indiana University. She studies Victorian literature and travel writing. Lord of the Flies Name That -Ism: A Quick Glossary of Some Systems of Government (definitions derived from the Oxford English Dictionary) Utopia: An imaginary island, depicted by Sir Thomas More as enjoying a perfect social, legal, and political system, now used to indicate any ideal region, country, or locality, either imaginary or unreachable. Also: an impossibly ideal scheme, esp. for social improvement. Dystopia: An imaginary place or condition in which everything is as bad as possible, especially the social system and government. Authoritarianism: any political system that exercises its governance by a principle of unelected rule. Variations on this theme: absolutism, despotism, tyranny. “Join or Die,” cartoon by Ben Franklin, Pennsylvania Gazette, May 9, 1754. Recycled from its original use during the French and Indian War, this cartoon was used to incite support for the American Revolution and opposition to Colonial authoritanianism. In this powerful image, connectedness is the only path to life. Fascism: usually defined as right-wing authoritarianism, characterized by zealous nationalism, opposition to majority rule, and the persecution of dissent. Instantiated by the government of Benito Mussolini and often exemplified by Hitler’s Nazism, though this is an extreme case. Totalitarianism: a system of government that tolerates only one political party, to which all other institutions are subordinated, and which usually demands the complete subservience of the individual to the State. Exemplified by Maoist communism in China, or Stalinism in the Soviet Union. Colonialism: the acquisition of land and resources in one territory for the profit of people in another. An unequal exchange of property and goods for authoritarian governance. Nihilism: a total rejection of prevailing religious beliefs, moral principles, laws, etc., often from a sense of despair and the belief that life is devoid of meaning. Also more generally: negativity, destructiveness, hostility to accepted beliefs or established institutions. Communism: A theory that advocates the abolition of private ownership, all property being vested in the community, and the organization of labor for the common benefit of all members; a system of social organization in which this theory is put into practice. 19 20 How Would You Rule Your Island? by Shakespeare and Ellen MacKay Lord of the Flies paints a pretty dark picture of boys left to devise their own system of rule. Shakespeare gives us another view of island self-governance in one of his last works. The following are some lines that the wise courtier, Gonzalo, speaks when he is marooned on (what he thinks is) an uninhabited island in The Tempest. What sort of government does he describe? How would you characterize its social structure? How might it look if you drew its principles as a sociogram? All things in common nature should produce Without sweat or endeavour: treason, felony, Sword, pike, knife, gun, or need of any engine, Would I not have; but nature should bring forth, Of its own kind, all foison, all abundance, To feed my innocent people. (1.2.175-180) Robert Bell's illustration of The Tempest's magic island, c. 1900, Collection of Folger Shakespeare Library (for a complete database of images like this one, see http://luna.folger.edu/luna/servlet.) Lord of the Flies From Page to Stage: What Happens When You Turn a Novel into a Play? by Ellen MacKay “They walked along, two continents of experience and feeling unable to communicate” — William Golding, Lord of the Flies This adaptation of Lord of the Flies was written by Cardinal Stage’s artistic director Randy White just for this production. White’s ambition was to stay as close to the novel as possible, without losing any of its mythic, mystic atmosphere. But in some places, Golding narrated ideas or events in a way that isn’t possible to reproduce in theatrical performance. Below you will find two cases in which the dramatic script diverges from the novel’s narrative. In the first example, the novel can leave unsaid a spoken exchange that a play cannot conceal. What do you think is lost or gained in each case? In the second, the novel expresses information that cannot be spoken by a character on the stage. Again, what is the price of this loss? Did you find that the actor transmitted any of this information in his performance? Do you think the play should have used a narrator or voiceover to speak these lines? From the book Simon was close to him, laying hands on the conch. Simon felt a perilous necessity to speak; but to speak in assembly was a terrible thing to him. “Maybe,” he said hesitantly, “maybe there is a beast.” The assembly cried out savagely and Ralph stood up in amazement. “You, Simon? You believe in this?” “I don’t know,” said Simon. His heartbeats were choking him. “But. . . ” The storm broke. “Sit down!” “Shut up!” “Take the conch!” “Sod you!” “Shut up!” Ralph shouted. “Hear him! He’s got the conch!” “What I mean is. . . maybe it’s only us.” “Nuts!” That was from Piggy, shocked out of decorum. Simon went on. “We could be sort of. . . ” Simon became inarticulate in his effort to express mankind’s essential illness. Inspiration came to him. 21 22 Cardinal Stage Company “What’s the dirtiest thing there is?” As an answer Jack dropped into the uncomprehending silence that followed it the one crude expressive syllable. Release was immense. Those littluns who had climbed back on the twister fell off again and did not mind. The hunters were screaming with delight.Simon’s effort fell about him in ruins; the laughter beat him cruelly and he shrank away defenceless to his seat. From the play Simon reaches for the conch. Simon (hesitating) Maybe, maybe there is a beast. Ralph You, Simon? You believe in this? Simon I don’t know—but… Roger Sit down! Maurice Shut up! Bill Take the conch! Henry Sod you— Maurice & Roger Shut up! Ralph (shouting over top) Hear him! He’s got the conch. Simon What I mean is… maybe it’s only us. Piggy Nuts! Simon We could be sort of… (struggles to articulate a barely glimpsed insight) Something inside us. An illness. (beat) What’s the dirtiest thing there is? The boys contemplate this. And then… Jack Shit. The boys scream with delight. Simon shrinks back. From the book The tide was coming in and there was only a narrow strip of firm beach between the water and the white, stumbling stuff near the palm terrace. Ralph chose the firm strip as a path because he needed to think, and only here could he allow his feet to move without having to watch them. Suddenly, pacing by the water, he was overcome with astonishment. He found himself understanding the wearisomeness of this life, where every path was an improvisation and a considerable part of one’s waking life was spent watching one’s feet. He stopped, facing the strip; and remembering that first enthusiastic exploration as though it were part of a brighter childhood, he smiled jeeringly. He turned then and walked back toward the platform with the sun in his face. The time had come for the assembly and as he walked into the concealing splendors of the sunlight he went carefully over the points of his speech. There must be no mistake about this assembly, no chasing imaginary. He lost himself in a maze of thoughts that were rendered vague by his lack of words to express them. Frowning, he tried again. Lord of the Flies This meeting must not be fun, but business. At that he walked faster, aware all at once of urgency and the declining sun and a little wind created by his speed that breathed about his face. This wind pressed his grey shirt against his chest so that he noticed—in this new mood of comprehension—how the folds were stiff like card- board, and unpleasant; noticed too how the frayed edges of his shorts were making an uncomfortable, pink area on the front of his thighs. With a convulsion of the mind, Ralph discovered dirt and decay, under- stood how much he disliked perpetually flicking the tangled hair out of his eyes, and at last, when the sun was gone, rolling noisily to rest among dry leaves. At that he began to trot. The beach near the bathing pool was dotted with groups of boys wait- ing for the assembly. They made way for him silently, conscious of his grim mood and the fault at the fire. The place of assembly in which he stood was roughly a triangle; but irregular and sketchy, like everything they made. First there was the log on which he himself sat; a dead tree that must have been quite exceptionally big for the platform. Perhaps one of those legendary storms of the Pacific had shifted it here. This palm trunk lay parallel to the beach, so that when Ralph sat he faced the island but to the boys was a darkish figure against the shimmer of the lagoon. The two sides of the triangle of which the log was base were less evenly defined. On the right was a log polished by restless seats along the top, but not so large as the chief’s and not so comfortable. On the left were four small logs, one of them— the farthest—lamentably springy. Assembly after assembly had broken up in laughter when someone had leaned too far back and the log had whipped and thrown half a dozen boys backwards into the grass. Yet now, he saw, no one had had the wit—not himself nor Jack, nor Piggy— to bring a stone and wedge the thing. So they would continue enduring the ill-balanced twister, because, because.. . . Again he lost himself in deep waters. Grass was worn away in front of each trunk but grew tall and untrod- den in the center of the triangle. Then, at the apex, the grass was thick again because no one sat there. All round the place of assembly the grey trunks rose, straight or leaning, and supported the low roof of leaves. On two sides was the beach; behind, the lagoon; in front, the darkness of the island. Ralph turned to the chief’s seat. They had never had an assembly as late before. That was why the place looked so different. Normally the underside of the green roof was lit by a tangle of golden reflections, and their faces were lit upside down—like, thought Ralph, when you hold an electric torch in your hands. But now the sun was slanting in at one side, so that the shadows were where they ought to be. Again he fell into that strange mood of speculation that was so foreign to him. If faces were different when lit from above or below—what was a face? What was anything? Ralph moved impatiently. The trouble was, if you were a chief you had to think, you had to be wise. And then the occasion slipped by so that you had to grab at a decision. This made you think; because thought was a valuable thing, that got results. 23 24 Cardinal Stage Company Only, decided Ralph as he faced the chief’s seat, I can’t think. Not like Piggy. Once more that evening Ralph had to adjust his values. Piggy could think. He could go step by step inside that fat head of his, only Piggy was no chief. But Piggy, for all his ludicrous body, had brains. Ralph was a specialist in thought now, and could recognize thought in another. The sun in his eyes reminded him how time was passing, so he took the conch down from the tree and examined the surface. Exposure to the air had bleached the yellow and pink to near-white, and transparency. Ralph felt a kind of affectionate reverence for the conch, even though he had fished the thing out of the lagoon himself. He faced the place of assembly and put the conch to his lips. The others were waiting for this and came straight away. Those who were aware that a ship had passed the island while the fire was out were subdued by the thought of Ralph’s anger; while those, including the litluns who did not know, were impressed by the general air of solemnity. The place of assembly filled quickly; Jack, Simon, Maurice, most of the hunters, on Ralph’s right; the rest on the left, under the sun. Piggy came and stood outside the triangle. This indicated that he wished to listen,but would not speak; and Piggy intended it as a gesture of disapproval. “The thing is: we need an assembly.” No one said anything but the faces turned to Ralph were intent. He flourished the conch. He had learnt as a practical business that funda- mental statements like this had to be said at least twice, before everyone understood them. One had to sit, attracting all eyes to the conch, and drop words like heavy round stones among the little groups that crouched or squatted. He was searching his mind for simple words so that even the littluns would understand what the assembly was about. Later perhaps, practised debaters—Jack, Maurice, Piggy—would use their whole art to twist the meeting: but now at the beginning the subject of the debate must be laid out clearly. “We need an assembly. Not for fun. Not for laughing and falling off the log”—the group of littluns on the twister giggled and looked at each other—“not for making jokes, or for”—he lifted the conch in an effort to find the compelling word—“for cleverness. Not for these things. But to put things straight.” He paused for a moment. “I’ve been alone. By myself I went, thinking what’s what. I know what we need. An assembly to put things straight. And first of all, I’m speak- ing.” He paused for a moment and automatically pushed back his hair. Piggy tiptoed to the triangle, his ineffectual protest made, and joined the others. Ralph went on. “We have lots of assemblies. Everybody enjoys speaking and being together. We decide things. But they don’t get done. We were going to have water brought from the stream and Lord of the Flies left in those coconut shells under fresh leaves. So it was, for a few days. Now there’s no water. The shells are dry. People drink from the river.” From the play Ralph moves down and in the fading twilight he blows the conch, long and loud. The boys move down with torches from the fire. They settle in and Ralph looks around at the eerie faces. Piggy stands outside the group. The distant sound of breakers and, at last, Ralph addresses the assembled boys. Ralph The thing is, we need an assembly. Not for fun—not for laughing and falling off the log—not for making jokes or for—for cleverness. Not for these things. But to put things straight. I’ve been alone—thinking. We have lots of assemblies and everybody enjoys speaking and being together. We decide things. But they don’t get done! We were going to have water brought from the stream and left in those coconut shells under fresh leaves. So it was for a few days. Now there’s no water. People drink from the river. 25 If you liked Lord of the Flies… Some Books Worth Exploring Ship Breaker, by Paulo Bacigalupi In a post-apocalyptic future, Nailer works as a ship breaker and salvager along the Gulf Coast. When he finds Nita nearly dead on a ship he is scavenging, Nailer decides to help save her from his father, who would sell Nita to her family’s enemies. Delerium, by Lauren Oliver Lena looks forward to receiving the government-mandated cure that prevents the delirium of love and leads to a safe, predictable, and happy life, until ninety-five days before her eighteenth birthday and her treatment, when she falls in love. Matched, by Allie Conde All her life, Cassia has never had a choice. The Society dictates everything: when and how to play, where to work, where to live, what to eat and wear, when to die, and most importantly to Cassia as she turns 17, whom to marry. When she is matched with her best friend Xander, things couldn’t be more perfect. But why did her neighbor Ky’s face show up on her match disk as well? 1984, by George Orwell Winston hates the system, hates Big Brother. He knows that his rebellion puts him in terrible danger and that the Thought Police will find him. Maze Runner #1, Scorch Trials #2, Death Cure #3, by James Dashner Thomas and his friends all woke up in a box, in a deadly maze with no memories. Their mission is to find a way out, discover who did this, and—most puzzling—why? Wither, by Lauren DeStefano At sixteen, Rhine Ellery has four years to live. After a botched effort to create a perfect race, all females live to twenty, and males to twentyfive. While geneticists seek a miracle antidote, orphans roam the streets and polygamy abounds. After Rhine is kidnapped and sold as a bride, she is desperate to escape from her husband’s strange world, including a sinister father-in-law and a slew of sister wives not to be trusted. On the cusp of her seventeenth birthday, Rhine attempts to flee—but finds a society spiraling into anarchy. Brave New World¸ by Aldous Huxley The astonishing novel Brave New World, originally published in 1932, presents Aldous Huxley’s vision of the future — of a world utterly transformed. Through the most efficient scientific and psychological engineering, people are genetically designed to be passive and therefore consistently useful to the ruling class. This powerful work of speculative fiction sheds a blazing critical light on the present and is considered to be Huxley’s most enduring masterpiece. House of the Scorpion, by Nancy Farmer Matteo Alacrán was not born; he was harvested. His DNA came from El Patrón, lord of a country called Opium—a strip of poppy fields lying between the United States and what was once called Mexico. He is a boy, but most consider him a monster—except for El Patrón. El Patrón loves Matt as he loves himself, because Matt is himself. As Matt struggles to understand his existence, he is threatened by a sinister cast of characters. Escape is the only chance Matt has to survive. But escape is no guarantee of freedom, because Matt is marked by his difference in ways he doesn’t even suspect. Z for Zachariah, by Richard O’Brian A nuclear holocaust has destroyed civilization. Ann Burden believes she is the last person alive until she finds another survivor. She discovers there are worse things than being alone. Life as We Knew It, by Susan Beth Pfeffer Through journal entries sixteen-year-old Miranda describes her family’s struggle to survive after a meteor hits the moon, causing worldwide tsunamis, earthquakes, and volcanic eruptions. Divergent, by Veronica Roth In a future Chicago, sixteen-year-old Beatrice Prior must choose among five predetermined factions to define her identity for the rest of her life, a decision made more difficult when she discovers that she is an anomaly who does not fit into any one group, and that the society she lives in is not perfect after all. The Forest of Hands and Teeth, by Carrie Ryan The rules of Mary’s world are simple: watch the fence and obey The Sisterhood. The unconsecrated rule the world outside of the fence and The Sisterhood says there is no world beyond the fence. Then where did the strange girl in the red vest come from? Unwind, by Neal Schusterman After the second Civil War was fought over reproductive rights, it was determined that life is untouchable from conception to age thirteen, at which point you can be unwound and have your organs donated so “life” does not end. Connor, Risa and Lev are set to be unwound… Ashes, Ashes, by Jo Treggiari In a future Manhattan devastated by catastrophes and epidemics, sixteen-year-old Lucy survives alone until she is forced to join Aidan and his band, where they learn she is the target of Sweepers, who kidnap and infect people with plague. Uglies, by Scott Westerfeld Tally can’t wait to be sixteen and finally turn pretty. Shay isn’t sure she wants to become pretty so she decides to run away. Tally follows after her friend and together they discover that being made into a Pretty is far more than anyone ever thought. Partials, by Dan Wells In a post-apocalyptic eastern seaboard ravaged by disease and war with a manmade race of people called Partials, the chance at a future rests in the hands of Kira Walker, a sixteen-year-old medic in training. All These Things I’ve Done, by Gabrielle Zevin In a future where chocolate and caffeine are contraband, teenage cell phone use is illegal, and water and paper are carefully rationed, sixteenyear-old Anya Balanchine finds herself thrust unwillingly into the spotlight as heir apparent to an important New York City crime family. This bibliography was compiled in large part by the youth services librarians at Sharon Public Library in Sharon, Massachusetts. For reading recommendations by teens for teens, see the Monroe County Public Library webpage http://www.monroe.lib.in.us/teens/teens-reviews