Thursday, November 28, 2019
1984 By George Orwell Essays (2359 words) - Nineteen Eighty-Four
  1984 By George Orwell    1984 is about life in a world where no personal freedoms exist. Winston the main  character is a man of 39 whom is not extraordinary in either intelligence or  character, but is disgusted with the world he lives in. He works in the Ministry  of Truth, a place where history and the truth is rewritten to fit the party's  beliefs. Winston is aware of the untruths, because he makes them true. This  makes him very upset with the government of Oceania, where Big Brother, a larger  than life figure, controls the people. His dissatisfaction increases to a point  where he rebels against the government in small ways. Winston's first act of  rebellion is buying and writing in a diary. This act is known as a thought crime  and is punishable by death. A thought crime is any bad thought against the  government of Oceania. Winston commits many thought crimes and becomes paranoid  about being caught, which he knows is inevitable (Greenblast 113). He becomes  paranoid because a young woman who is actively involved in many community groups  follows him. Winston is obsessed with the past, a time before Oceania was under  strict dictatorship. He goes into an antique shop and buys a shell covered in  glass, which is another crime punishable by death. He sees the same woman  following him. Many thoughts race through his mind "I wanted to rape you  and then murder you afterwards. Two weeks ago I thought seriously of smashing  your head in with a cobblestone. If you really want to know, I imagined that you  had something to do with the Thought Police" (Orwell 101). The girl who was  following him slipped him a note while at work. The note said, "I love  you"(Orwell 90). They make plans to meet each other and carry on an illegal  love affair. This love affair is another rebellion against the government. It  goes on for some time. Winston rents a room where he and Julia can be secluded  from the outside world. They meet a man named O'Brien who indicates that he is  another revolutionary. Winston and Julia go to his house to meet with him.    O'Brien gives than a seditious book to read. Soon after that, they are caught by  the Thought Police and never see each other again. O'Brien, becomes Winston's  rehabilitator and torturer for the next 9 months. O'Brien tortures Winston in  stages. The first two stages are to force the party's beliefs on him then learn  and understand what is expected of him. In the third stage, Winston is made to  face what he secretly fears most, rats eating his face. After being completely  rehabilitated by O'Brien, Winston now loves the establishment and the  government. He is set free. Big Brother is the figurehead of a government that  has total control. The Big Brother regime uses propaganda and puts fear in its  citizens to keep the general population in line. "Big Brother is watching  you"(Orwell 5) is just one example of many party slogans that puts fear in  its citizens. Big Brother uses various ways to catch people guilty of bad  thoughts "In the world of 1984 the tyrant Big Brother does employ a vast  army of informers called thought police, who watch every citizen at all times  for the least signs of criminal deviation which may consist simply of unorthodox  thoughts"(Daley 112). Winston Smith represents Orwell's view on  totalitarianism. Winston rebels against the government of Oceania by starting a  diary and constantly having bad thoughts against the government. "Winston  knows that he is doomed from the moment he has his first heretical thought. The  tensions of the novel concerns how long he can stay alive and whether it is  possible for Winston to die without mentally betraying his rebellion" (Greenblast    115). Winston starts writing in a diary for two reasons. The first is that he  wants to be able to remember the daily occurrences in the world. In 1984, the  memory of individuals, is effectively manipulated, programmed, and controlled  from the outside by the party (Kolakowski 127). People don't know what they are  consciously remembering and what is told to them. "The party had invented  airplanes" (Orwell 127) is just one example of the party's propaganda and  false statements that change every day. The other reason for the diary is so  that people in the future will be able to read what went on during Winston's  time and to tell them about his daily reflections on his feelings about the  party. These are the same reasons why    
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