Beasts in the Sun: Archetypes of Power, Decay, and the Primal in Solar-Centric Narratives
The sun here serves as a leveler. Without the shadows of cities or the night of technology, the hunter-beast dominates. The grandsons hunt Granser not out of malice but out of a solar logic: all that is exposed is prey. This archetype reappears in Richard Connell’s The Most Dangerous Game (1924), where General Zaroff hunts sailors on a sun-drenched Caribbean island. The sun’s relentless clarity removes the moral fog of civilization, revealing that the ultimate beast is man, and the ultimate law is thermoregulation—kill or dehydrate. beasts in the sun
The juxtaposition of "beasts" and "the sun" serves as a powerful dyad in literature, film, and cultural mythology. While the sun traditionally represents enlightenment, divinity, and logical order, the beast embodies raw instinct, chaos, and the pre-civilized id. This paper argues that the convergence of these two symbols—beasts exposed to the relentless solar gaze—creates a distinct narrative space where societal structures dissolve, revealing primal truths about mortality, power, and ecological fragility. Through an analysis of Jack London’s The Scarlet Plague , William Golding’s Lord of the Flies , and contemporary climate fiction (specifically the trope of “solar cannibalism”), this paper delineates four archetypal manifestations: The Hunter, The Martyr, The Parasite, and The Phoenix. Ultimately, "Beasts in the Sun" functions as a thermogothic metaphor for the Anthropocene, wherein the very source of life becomes an agent of terrifying revelation. Beasts in the Sun: Archetypes of Power, Decay,
This paper develops the concept of the as a literary figure that emerges during periods of cultural anxiety about progress and sustainability. Unlike the Romantic beast (noble, hidden, harmonious with nature) or the Gothic beast (nocturnal, supernatural, hidden in fog), the Solar Beast is diurnal, excessive, and often pitiful in its exposure. It is the lion on a shrinking savanna, the stranded whale under a white sun, or the feral child on a deserted atoll. By analyzing key texts from the late 19th century to the contemporary era, we will trace how authors use this figure to critique three distinct failures: the failure of civilization, the failure of the body, and the failure of the ecosystem. 2. Archetype One: The Hunter (Predation as Solar Law) In the first archetype, the sun empowers the beast. Here, solar light eliminates the possibility of hiding, forcing a state of pure, Hobbesian competition. The most potent example is Jack London’s post-apocalyptic novella The Scarlet Plague (1912). After a plague destroys industrial society, the surviving protagonist, Granser, wanders a sun-drenched California. His grandsons, raised in this new world, have become feral beasts. London explicitly describes them as “little animals” who squint in the perpetual sunlight. This archetype reappears in Richard Connell’s The Most
In modern literature, this appears in Yann Martel’s Life of Pi (2001). The Bengal tiger, Richard Parker, trapped on a lifeboat under a merciless Pacific sun, is not a free predator but a suffering martyr. The sun bleaches his stripes, weakens his roar, and forces him into a symbiotic horror with Pi. The “beast in the sun” here is a figure of shared annihilation—the recognition that both man and animal are equal before the indifferent solar flare.
Golding’s genius is in equating the sun with the pig’s head on a stick—the Lord of the Flies itself. The sun’s heat causes the pig’s head to bloat, swarm with flies, and rot. This is the solar parasite: the maggot, the fly, the fungal growth that thrives under UV radiation. The beast is no longer a lion or a tiger; it is the swarm . Jack’s tribe, painting their faces with clay, becomes a parasitic organism that feeds on the leftover structures of civilization (Piggy’s glasses, the signal fire). The sun does not illuminate truth; it accelerates putrefaction.