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No Mercy: True Stories of Disaster, Survival and Brutality

par Eleanor Learmonth, Jenny Tabakoff (Auteur)

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"A fascinating post-mortem of how certain groups manage to survive while others flailed about in drunken, murderous chaos."--The Daily Telegraph We approach the subject in the light of what can be called the Lord of the Flies principle, after the famous novel by William Golding in which a group of schoolboys is marooned on an uninhabited island after a plane crash.Lord of the Flies depicts the boys' horrifying and all-too-believable regression to a state of savagery and blood-lust. A superb mix of psychology, history, and nail-biting storytelling,No Mercy investigates historical instances of disaster and asks, "How far would you go to survive?" No Mercy looks at what happens to human beings when disaster strikes: how they tackle the task of survival, how they change, how they treat their companions. No Mercy covers the infamous Robbers Cave experiment in Oklahoma in the 1950s, the wrecks of theBatavia in 1629 and the French vesselMedusa off Mauritania in 1816, the Chilean mine collapse in 2010, and many more disaster situations. The authors examine the factors that lead to failure or success and how they are explained by modern neuroscience. Eleanor Learmonth has worked as a teacher and freelance journalist in Japan and Australia.Jenny Tabakoff is a senior journalist. Both live in Sydney, Australia, with their families.… (plus d'informations)
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No Mercy: True Stories of Disaster, Survival and Brutality by Eleanor Learmonth and Jenny Tabakoff is a very highly recommended, thought provoking look at how groups of people act and the extremes they will go to in order to survive during a traumatic event, such as a ship wreck or plane crash in a remote area. Why do some people work together and survive the disaster with fewer fatalities while other groups disintegrate into stupidity and violence?

Learmonth and Tabakoff note in the prologue that, "This book considers numerous such examples of the Lord of the Flies principle in history. We focus on predominantly adult groups who found themselves stranded and in conditions of extreme stress at dates between 134 BC and 2010 AD, in remote locations across the globe. Several of these episodes will be considered in depth; others will appear as we look at the factors that seem to dictate the survivor groups’ behavior and dynamics. We analyze the twisting path of social disintegration with reference to other failed groups—some famous, others relegated to the dusty, forgotten corners of history."

No Mercy looks at how William Golding in his book The Lord of the Flies presents us with a principle that can be used when observing any group that finds itself isolated and faced with the struggle to survive. "The Lord of the Flies principle 1. groups will inevitably fragment into factions. 2. leaders frequently become obsessed with maintaining control rather than leading. 3. if the strong are battling to survive, they will not waste care and resources on the weak. 4. morality, mercy and compassion are the expendable luxuries of civilization. 5. individuals will passively sanction evil actions by others to avoid becoming the next victim. 6. the rule of law will decay into a state of nature. 7. in the long run, there is only one rule: self-preservation." (Page xix)

I was engrossed in each tale of survival (or not) and the various actions each group took. "While almost every disaster has a degree of stupidity at its core, it is how the survivors behave and respond that often separates the living from the dead." The authors point out that some of the stupidity is actually the result of a built in neuro-chemical reaction that we have no control over.

Contents include:
A Location map
Prologue
The Lord of the Flies principle
HELL ON WATER: THE MEDUSA RAFT; Fear; Panic; Faith in command; Alcohol; Fairness
PROBLEMS IN PATAGONIA: THE WRECK OF THE WAGER; Fragmentation; Caring for the weak and injured; ‘Polar disease’; Starvation; Stupidity and inertia
CASTAWAYS IN THE SUB-ANTARCTIC; The shifting sands of authority; Compassion; The dogma of race; The dark; The beast
BLOODSHED IN VINLAND; Suicide; Abuse and violence; The last resort; Killing for food
A MORAL ABYSS: THE LIFEBOAT OF THE WILLIAM BROWN; Murder; Thrill kills; Last man standing; Scars; Implications
Avoiding the Lord of the Flies principle; Into the woods: the Robbers Cave experiment; Précis of Lord of the Flies
Acknowledgments; Sources; Illustrations; Index

The opening of each major section shows the title and other quick statistics. For example
Hell on Water: the raft of the Medusa
Location: Atlantic Ocean off the Sahara Desert
nationality: Primarily French
Date: 1816
Fatality Rate: 91%
Duration: 13 days

or
Castaways in the Sub-Antarctic
Location: Auckland Islands
nationality: Multinational crew
Date: 1864
Fatality Rate: 0%
DuRation: 600 days
"While the other case studies we have considered can easily be categorized as abject failures, this example shows that a group can sidestep the Lord of the Flies principle even in the harshest of circumstances." In this chapter it was also interesting that many survivors talk about an ‘unseen presence’, which felt malevolent for some and a comforting guardian angel to others. This has been named the Third Man Syndrome after Shackleton’s encounter.

This is really a compelling, fascinating, dramatic look back at the social decay and implosion that occurred in various groups of people under extreme stress. It proves "Golding’s overarching concept that the primary thing from which the group needs protection is itself."


Disclosure: My Kindle edition was courtesy of the Text Publishing Company for review purposes. ( )
  SheTreadsSoftly | Mar 21, 2016 |
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Nom de l'auteurRôleType d'auteurŒuvre ?Statut
Eleanor Learmonthauteur principaltoutes les éditionscalculé
Tabakoff, JennyAuteurauteur principaltoutes les éditionsconfirmé

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"A fascinating post-mortem of how certain groups manage to survive while others flailed about in drunken, murderous chaos."--The Daily Telegraph We approach the subject in the light of what can be called the Lord of the Flies principle, after the famous novel by William Golding in which a group of schoolboys is marooned on an uninhabited island after a plane crash.Lord of the Flies depicts the boys' horrifying and all-too-believable regression to a state of savagery and blood-lust. A superb mix of psychology, history, and nail-biting storytelling,No Mercy investigates historical instances of disaster and asks, "How far would you go to survive?" No Mercy looks at what happens to human beings when disaster strikes: how they tackle the task of survival, how they change, how they treat their companions. No Mercy covers the infamous Robbers Cave experiment in Oklahoma in the 1950s, the wrecks of theBatavia in 1629 and the French vesselMedusa off Mauritania in 1816, the Chilean mine collapse in 2010, and many more disaster situations. The authors examine the factors that lead to failure or success and how they are explained by modern neuroscience. Eleanor Learmonth has worked as a teacher and freelance journalist in Japan and Australia.Jenny Tabakoff is a senior journalist. Both live in Sydney, Australia, with their families.

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