Lord of the Flies: How WWII and the Holocaust Shaped Literature's Darkest Vision

What Happened: The Dark Genesis of a Literary Classic William Golding wrote “Lord of the Flies” between 1951-1954, drawing directly from his experiences as a Royal Navy officer during World War II and his observations of how the Nazi regime gained mass support. The novel, published in 1954, depicted a group of British schoolboys descending into savagery when stranded on a deserted island—a deliberate allegory for civilization’s fragility. Golding’s inspiration came from a disturbing realization: the Nazis hadn’t simply imposed their murderous regime through force alone.

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New Research Reveals How Paper Restorers Helped Create Nazi Holocaust Records

What Happened Historian Dr. Morwenna Blewett has uncovered Nazi-era letters that document a Europe-wide program in which restoration professionals were enlisted to repair fragile genealogical records. These documents were then used by Nazi authorities to systematically identify Jewish populations for persecution and murder. The research, first published in The Guardian, reveals that ordinary professionals in seemingly neutral occupations—bookbinders, paper conservators, and restoration specialists—became integral to the Nazi genocidal machinery. Their technical expertise in document preservation enabled Nazi investigators to access historical records that would otherwise have been too damaged to use for tracing Jewish ancestry.

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