1984 Essay Questions

recalthyli1986 113 views 20 slides Jun 09, 2023
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About This Presentation

1984 Discussion
Nineteen Eighty-Four 1984 Analysis
George Orwell s 1984 Power
1984 Active Reading Questions And Answers
George Orwells Nineteen Eighty-Four 1984
Examples Of Dystopian Society In 1984
Loss Of Freedom In George Orwells 1984
1984 Reflection
Loneliness In 1984
1984 Essay examples
1984 Vs...


Slide Content

1984 Discussion
1984 Discussion Questions
1. The world within which Winston lives is replete with contradictions. For example a, major tenet
of the Party's philosophy is that War is Peace. Similarly, the Ministry of Love serves as, what we
would consider, a department of war. What role do these contradictions serve on a grand scale?
Discuss other contradictions inherent in the Party's philosophy. What role does contradiction serve
within the framework of Doublethink? How does Doublethink satisfy the needs of The Party?
2. In the afterword, the commentator describes 1984 as "a warning." Indeed, throughout the text,
Orwell plants both subtle and overt warnings to the reader. What do you think are some of the larger
issues at hand here?
3. Describe the...show more content...
Charrington's spare room, Winston undergoes a process of "philosophical cleansing" and re–
education against which he valiantly, but unsuccessfully fights. Discuss Winston's "capitulation" at
the hands of O'Brien. How is Winston brought to "love Big Brother?" In sacrificing Julia, how has
Winston, in essence, signaled his own end?
13. How would you describe the author's tone in 1984? Does it add to or detract from the character's
discourse?
14. Discuss the role of sex and intimacy in 1984. What specific function does the Party's directive on
sexual interaction serve?
15. In the final analysis, how accurate was Orwell in his vision of the future? In what ways does
our contemporary society compare to his idea of society in 1984? Are there examples in which he
was correct? What is most opposite? Do you see a potential for aspects of Orwell's "vision" to come
true?
16. During his final encounter with O'Brien, Winston argues that, if all else fails, the inherent nature
of the individual–the "spirit of man"–is strong enough to undermine a society such as that created by
The Party. Do you agree or disagree with this statement? Is Winston's belief applicable to the world
we live in today? Can you cite examples in our own recent history that support or dismiss Winston's
belief in the resiliency and righteousness of the human spirit?
17. Prior to meeting her, Winston fantasizes about Julia in violent, humiliating ways. Later, he
describes in his diary an
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Nineteen Eighty-Four 1984 Analysis
What is the meaning to individualism, is it ones personality, ones humanity, or is it to follow rules
and commands given? In the novel "Nineteen Eighty–Four" by George Orwell, he describes a
character known as Winston who sees flaws within the society, but know one else sees it. Winston
is telling a story of how the Party has divided people into three categories, the inner party members,
the otter party members, and the proles. Winston is telling us through his eyes and experience a
glimpse of the future, if no one stands up to the Party the party will contuse to the shape the world
in their ways. The Party wants ultimate control and will do anything to keep on top. While the Party
has total control in 1984, the people in Oceania do not need to seek out individualism. The Party uses
telescreens to monitor and to observe the people of Oceania. The people do not need to experience
out for themselves. They have designed a "2 Minute–Hate" in this two minute session people are to
come together and sit through the session and listen to what the Party needs to say. The party uses
telescreens to promote a common enemy to the people. The people are able to express anger to the
enemy and cheer when the Party has done something great....show more content...
Such as at the age of three children are known as the Comrade Ogilvy, where they are refused toys
but are given a submachine and a helicopter. At the age of six children are given set rules and they
are to join the Youth league known as the Children Spy League. At the age of eleven they are then
announced to the Though Police and their duties are to observe those living in Oceania, making
sure that everyone else is obey the rules of the Party. The last group to be joined is at the age of
seven–teen which is the Anti–Sex League (48). This groups are to be carried out as children grow
up to becoming adults. The party designs these groups to keep everyone
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George Orwell 's 1984 Power
In George Orwell's 1984 Power is gained most effectively through control, fear and violence.
Compared to a government like that of America's, 1984 creates a more threatening structure of
government where the public is limited from freedom and happiness. 1984 shows a world of a
society where only the upper class has power and freedom from the harsh treatment that the
general population receives. The idea of Big Bother makes the population of Oceania believe they
are being watched over by a powerful force and oppresses them so they feel powerless and unable to
do anything against a "great" force like Big Brother. The well–being of others depends on their
willingness to agree with Big Brother and abide by their laws, if you think otherwise then you will
be an accuser of thought–crime will be vaporized and removed from society or harshly punished
through rigorous treatment and torture methods as was Winston and Julia. Power creates problems
for others in which they do not deserve. "The oldest and strongest emotion of mankind is fear, and
the oldest and strongest kind of fear is fear of the unknown – H. P. Lovecraft." Fear in 1984 is the
main reason that society is like it is, people are afraid of the unknown and what may or may not
happen if they oppose the rules. Thought–crime is one of the largest reasons why the 1984 society is
so devastating, any opposition against rules or thoughts that seem "dangerous" will be acted upon
and you will be vaporized or vanished. The words
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1984 Active Reading Questions And Answers
1984 Active Reading Notes Section I Page 3
пѓ "It was a bright cold day in April" initially a description of the sight is given to the reader so
they could get a sense of the location.
пѓ The first character we were introduced to is Winston Smith. We see that in his house there is no
power & that the government cuts off the power during the day. By this I assume that he is poor/in
the struggle and he's trying to make his way through life. п ѓ The quote "Big Brother is watching"
this is an allusion which is really meaning that the government is watching you. They most have
secret cameras hidden to detect any acts. For example in today's modern day there are loads of
conspiracy theories stating that we are being watched by the government and...show more content...
This quote is a great example of how the government tells you what you want to hear & also what
you want to hear. Furthermore they can make you believe anything. Change is camouflaged and the
one who can change the country is a law breaker.
Page 42
пѓ "Day by day and almost minute by minute the past was brought up to date"
Winston makes it known that Big Brother is freighting him. He wouldn't think it's imaginably
possible to brainwash the people of his country and erase what had happened.
Page 54
пѓ "'It's a beautiful thing, the destruction of words'" (54)
The government is clearly trying to change everyone's vocabulary/the way they speak. They are
trying to make everyone speak "newspeak", this is vital to the government's manipulation so they
can take more control over us. The exact same thing happened in real time after the war in 1948,
this form of manipulation is called "Logocracy".
Page 64
"Winston would be vaporized. O'Brien would be vaporized. Parsons, on the other hand, would never
be vaporized"
This here is portraying how the intellectually strong can survive, and the lesser minds cannot bear to
compete with someone strong like
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George Orwell's Nineteen Eighty-Four 1984
This story is broken into three main parts. The first part is an introduction of the totalitarian
society, where Big Brother dominates the world. In the first part, Winston is useless in trying to
rebell against Big Brother, although he has a diary where he writes his hatred and thoughts about
Big Brother. The first part of the story starts out the problem and is used as an introduction of
1984. The second part of the story was the climax. Winston began speaking to Julia and rebelled
against Big Brother, by having sexual relations with Julia. Winston also had majorly transformed
himself: he became a member of the Brotherhood. Although Winston did become a member of the
Brotherhood, he does not know if it exists or if it does not. To add on,
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Examples Of Dystopian Society In 1984
A dystopian society is a place or state in which everything is bad or unpleasant. In the book 1984,
Oceania, the town where the story takes place, is a complete totalitarian society in which one is
constantly being watched. Winston Smith, the main character of the book, is videotaped
wherever he goes, including his house, work, and around town. Just about everything is illegal,
including thoughtcrime, so just thinking about doing something wrong can get you in trouble.
One day he meets up with Julia, a young girl he is attracted to. After hooking up with each other
in a room above Mr. Charrington's shop, they are caught by the Thought Police. After a long time
in the Ministry of Truth, O'Brien, Winston's friend and a worker at the Ministry of Truth, helps
cure him to allow Winston to return to the society. In 1984, George Orwell explores
characterization to help develop a dystopian society. The first way Orwell develops his characters
are by the amount of power he gives them. For example, Winston has no power. This allows him to
get caught by the Thought Police. Even children have more power, although it is not stated.
Children have more power in 1984 because they have the power to get their parents in trouble. "It
was almost normal for people over thirty to be frightened of their own children" (Orwell 24).
Children could go behind their parents back. This is because they government tries to get them to
confess illegal things their. Adults with children had to watch out to
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Loss Of Freedom In George Orwell's 1984
The face of a man of about forty–five, with a heavy black moustache and ruggedly handsome
features. Who is he? He is Big Brother, the ruler and destroyer of Oceania and the reality of today.
It is easy to believe that the Government monitoring people in order to keep them safe. But how
exactly is it keeping everyone safe? In George Orwell's novel 1984 citizens of Oceania are
constantly being watched over and spied on. In the fiction novel 1984 the circumstances in which
the citizens of Oceania live under seem terrible but what is worse is that people live under these
circumstances today in real life. The lack of privacy that exists today and in 1984 results in one to
feel a loss in freedom, to feel paranoid, and to feel inferior. To have surveillance...show more
content...
To take away the ability to think and do actions freely would be horrible and leave one feeling
restricted. Citizens of Oceania are being watched at all times through the telescreens, police,
children, and thought police. The loss of freedom in 1984 can be seen through the protagonist
Winston Smith, when he writes in his diary, "Freedom is the freedom to say that two plus two
make four. If that is granted, all else follows." (Orwell 84) In the novel with the surrounding of
telescreens Winston is forced to show fake expressions because he knows that if his true
expressions were to be seen that there would be consequences. This shows how restricted
Winston's life is and how he cannot even express his emotions freely. In the article 'Big Brother
Logs On' different types of technologies are mentioned, ones that are a part of surveillance, a part
of tracking people, identifying people and so much more. With the great advancement of
technologies that are intended to aid with increasing safety for everyone, everyones freedom is also
lost. Today everything from birth certificates to the last text message sent is all stored online and
nothing can be deleted. Everything about everyone is saved and stored and not exactly everything is
saved with
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1984 Reflection
George Orwell wrote 1984 in the year 1949, and although his vision of the future obviously did
not come to fruition, the principals of the book still apply to society today. Imagining a world
where individual expression is completely outlawed is nightmarish, and thankfully we are still
able to seize the day and make of it what we choose. The idea that a party could grow this powerful
and completely control an entire third of the world is ludicrous, but with the level of spying and
technology present in this narrative, it begins to seem more plausible. Orwell likely wrote this
novel as a cautionary tale to those who lust for power, and wishes to see a world where people are
able to be themselves. Orwell envelopes his audience in this fantasy, and whenever the book is
put down, the reader is relieved that they are not trapped in this reality of Orwell's. Throughout
the narrative, Winston exposits about the world he lives in, and these details compound to create
a ghoulish reality. In rich and interesting dialogue, as well as inner thoughts, Orwell tells the story
of a man experiencing all that Oceania has to offer. All the intense realism strikes a tone of
familiarity with the reader, as they, too, feel overwhelmed and lost in the book itself. Orwell
envelops the reader, and that is why his message is so convincing. Winston leads a normal life in
this oppressive regime, and seems to have survived by simply going through the notions and
avoiding negative attention. However, he begins to think how much the party controls, and begins
to question whether or not they are helping or hurting the people. Certain discontinuities with the
past are proven to Winston, and he begins to investigate by interrogating those few who remain
alive from before the revolution, in hopes they might remember what life was like before Big
Brother took over. As Winston soon realizes, though, the seniors are too scared to truly answer the
simple question: "Was life better before the revolution than it is now?" (p. 93). The survivors only
remember silly trivial things, and were incapable of relaying the big picture. Exclusively using such
details and avoiding the answers that Winston seeks, Orwell shows the reader how little anyone in
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Loneliness In 1984
In his novel, 1984, George Orwell places a thirty–nine–year–old man, Winston Smith, in a realm
where the ruling powers have complete control over their citizens. The inhabitants of this
dystopia are expected to have absolute loyalty to that of "Big Brother," the face of the
government. The plot follows Winston's rebellion against the world's leaders and their policies.
According to his perspective, Winston is alone in his disapproval of the "Party," which is the
term allotted to the followers of "Big Brother." This solitude ignites hope in Winston that after all,
he is not isolated in his beliefs. From Winston's loneliness, the desire to find another who shares
his views blossoms. He, like most people, craved human connection. He had been married, and
perhaps still was (he was not sure), to a woman so orthodox that it repulsed him. It is never made
apparent what occurs to Winston's wife, but his time with her was not pleasant. He hated what she
stood for and how she represented the ideal Party member. This disgust for his wife added to his
distaste for the government....show more content...
He was aware that if one broke these rules, they are likely to disappear, every record of them
erased, as though they had never even existed. An additional reason for his anger towards Big
Brother and all ruling powers was that Winston realized that at his job, he was falsifying records,
and that every single document from the past had to be edited to agree with the government in the
present. This made our protagonist question the government even further. He swore that he could
strictly remember that the continuous war had, only 4 years earlier, been with a different enemy, but
there was no record of
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1984 Essay examples
The book 1984 tells a story of a world that is undergoing a totalitarian rule, whereby the freedom
of human beings is removed and there is injustice present to all by the loss of privacy. It is a
world where information can be changed and influenced in order to favour the Great Powers, I
believe that this world of 1984 is possible for its looming signs are present worldwide. I believe
that the chances of such a situation occurring depends on the societies capacity to do it, or in other
words if the technology to bring about such a situation is available then the chance of this
occurring is equally likely. Of course we see in our present day world that technology has taken a
huge upheaval. Our technology in terms of privacy is now far...show more content...
The manipulation of information in 1984 is a significant factor of its continual submission of its
citizens to the Great Power. Changing information may also lead to the power of changing the
past. This is obvious and an intention of Big Brother, his continual success is bleakly based upon
his power to lie. There are scenarios we see today that perfectly incorporate to 1984. `The children
overboard crisis'. This is a situation where asylum seekers coming into Australia were refused aid
when their boats were sinking. The media had covered the footage of this incident occurring,
although there were twists in the story that were in favour of the government or there was incredibly
strong bias in the circumstances. Nationwide the people saw refugee children being thrown
overboard by their parents; the media headlined this as being a desperate attempt of the adults to get
the attention of the Australian Government to receive aid. But the reason why such an action was
undergone was solely intended for the government's sheer willingness to receive the citizens' trust
and remain in lead and control. So how is this situation different from the similar actions shown in
1984? The answer is that it is not. The governments have undergone the same actions of changing the
truth in order to remain in control just like Big Brothers attempts to change his malevolent past
through to morally remain in power. But in 1984 there is a
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1984 Vs. Moral Issues In George Orwell's 1984
Kylie Silva Dr. LeCarner Senior Lit and Comp October 23, 2017 1984 vs. Moral Issues Moral
issues, big problems, with very small attention. Could this be the reason our society is falling
apart today? Is this the reason why some people, are blaming the nation's biggest massacre, on the
government? To distract us, to take us into some other place, where war isn't happening, where
there isn't a wall being built. Is this what George Orwell was talking about in his book 1984? To
warn us about what lies ahead, what we should expect? In the book 1984, the author George
Orwell, does a great job of demonstrating why moral issues are a concern, and he does it in a way
that is easy to understand. He makes the problem, seem big, even though to us today it seems very
small. He shows moral issues that are very important and need to be addressed, like government
control, and technology. It's a part of our everyday life, and is the reason our society is the way it
is. What is this issue, you might be asking. Well the answer is simple; the Government. "Big Brother
is Watching You," this quote says a lot about the book 1984. In the book, the government not only
has complete control over every little move you make, they also have the power to manipulate the
news you hear and the way you hear it. "Big Brother," is the government (thought police).The
thought police are, secret police that watch you through telescreens and arrest anyone that has
committed a rebellious act. They control
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1984, by George Orwell was written in 1949. The book was written shortly after World War II
warning people of the possibility of a totalitarian government. Orwell may have tried to warn
people of this fearful society however he did not try hard enough. Modern American society is
strikingly similar to the dystopian novel 1984 because the government is always watching its
citizens, there is a never ending war, and they both utilize mass mind control through media.
America is at a constant war with many nations and terrorists. Oceania and America are similar
because citizens in both nations are in the dark about who their country is fighting. As Winston
states, "... to say who was fighting whom at any given moment would have been utterly
impossible..." (Orwell 43). People in America are taught to fear terrorists because there is no
knowing of who the real enemy is. Citizens in Oceania are always at war with Eastasia or Eurasia.
Similar to how America is in a "never ending war on terror." The US government uses the war on
terror as an excuse to disrespect and intrude on citizens' privacy....show more content...
Even though America does not have telescreens it has computers and phones. Facebook keeps a
database of what a person likes or dislikes and keeps for advertisement reasoning. Google and
Youtube are also notorious for tracking and using big data to discover how to advertise to its
customers. Google tracks its users and keeps records of gmail accounts and what the user sends.
If a user uses Google Chrome every website he or she visits will be tracked. Google also illegally
tracks Apple products when the user is on Safari. Another way Americans are tracked liked citizens
in 1984 are the massive use of security cameras in large cities. Which people may be monitored
without them knowing or having
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Essay Questions George Orwell's '1984'
1984 HOTS Questions
Can you identify the different techniques that the Party uses to control the people under their power?
Can you elaborate on the reason why room 101 is so daunting to most, even to the ones that have
never been into the room, or know what the room holds?
What would happen if the people against the Party started a rebellion? Could the rebels overthrow
the Party, or be defeated by the Party's strong power it holds?
What could you do instead of newspeak, for minimizing the thoughts people have and the language
they speak for the benefit of the Party's control?
Can you elaborate on the reason why Big Brother has an impact on Winston?
Why is thoughtcrime so important to the Party? What evidence can you find that proves thoughtcrime
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George Orwell 1984 Essay
From what I can gleam from George Orwell 's 1984 is it gives thee reader an insight to what it
would be like if you lived in a free country that threw some acts of war or rebellion became
colonized by a totalitarian nation. The book was written in 1949 and utilizes early Russian and Nazi
Germany ideology. For example, during this time period the Germany was governed by a dictatorship
and under the control of Adolf Hitler. This regime was notorious for the placement of citizens into
forced laborers, prisons, and concentration camp system were a larger portion died from starvation,
harsh conditions, murder, or being worked to death. These horrific descriptions are echoed through
the first four chapters. Still, I believe the most important aspect of the first four chapters of 1984, is
the introduction phase. The readers are introduced to the major...show more content...
Winston works in the Records Department in the Ministry of Truth, where his job is to rewrite
history according to the demands of The Party. Winston worked with "Reality Conntrol" called
Newspeak, it was the primary tool utilized by INGSOC and The Party to discourage free thinking.
We are given a plethora of details about his work, occupational environment, and departments that
comprise the Ministry. This is significant because we get a better understanding of the political
system of Oceania society and how the enforcement of orthodoxy to an all–powerful leader, known
as "Big Brother" is maintained.
In summation Orwell 's 1984 gets it foundation from early Russian and Nazi Germany ideology. In
this volume we are introduced to the main charter who yearns to be a rebel and starts his journey
by breaking a law that is punishable by death if discovered. The story express how a totalitarian
government wants to control its resident, have total power over their minds and measure they're
willing to integrate in order to achieve their
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1984 by George Orwell Essay
1984 by George Orwell George Orwell's Nineteen Eighty–Four is the ultimate negative utopia.
Written in 1949 as an apocalyptic vision of the future, it shows the cruelty and pure horror of
living in an utterly totalitarian world where all traces of individualism are being abolished. This
novel was composed to denounce Hitler?s Germany and Stalin?s Russia and to create a warning to
the rest of the world. It takes the reader through a year in the life of Winston Smith as he transforms
from a rebel to a fanatic of totalitarianism. The political party of Oceania is INGSOC, which is also
known as English Socialism. The government monitors the lives of the citizens through
technological means to insure loyalty through surveillance,...show more content...
No one can be trusted in fear that they might report to the Thought Police. This held true for
families as well. Children are sometimes known to turn in their own parents to the thought police
for such simple things as hoarding spices for food. One has to watch his or her facial expressions at
all times, because "the smallest thing could give you away. A nervous tic, an unconscious look of
anxiety, a habit of muttering to yourself – anything that carried with it the suggestion of abnormality,
of having something to hide." (Orwell, p.65) Those who think for themselves are arrested by the
Thought Police and sent to the Ministry of Love, where they are re–educated or killed. Sometimes
both. This novel serves as a warning against the dangers of a technologically advanced tyrannical
government. It is set in London, the chief city of Airstrip One, a province of Oceania. It is possibly
the year 1984, although with the party's control of all facts, one could never be sure. ?To begin
with, he did not know with any certainty that this was 1984. It must be round about that date, since
he was fairly sure that his age was thirty–nine, and he believed that he had been born in 1944 or
1945; but it was never possible nowadays to pin down any date within a year or two.? (Orwell, p.9)
1984 is a forecast of an anti–utopian world. Oceania, where the book is set, is led by the socialist
leader, Big Brother. In this state, all thoughts and actions are monitored through
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1984 Memory Analysis
Down Memory Lane In 1984, by George Orwell, the array of memories and dreams of Winston
helps to convey his past and how he is dealing with the dystopian society. Everything Winston
remembers and dreams of has a significant meaning to him and the readers. But, by the end of the
book, Winston is tortured into forgetting everything and relearning everything the Party wants
him too. The memories and dreams that are scattered throughout the novel are a key point to
understanding Winston. As 1984 develops, Orwell depicts how Winston differs from most of the
other people in the dystopian society, in a way that he is able to relive memories from his
childhood. Not only this, but Winston is also able to remember history in its correct version, not
the version changed by the Party. "... at this moment it had been announced that Oceania was not
after all at war with Eurasia. Oceania was at war with Eastasia. Eurasia was an ally. There was, of
course, no admission that any change had taken place" (Orwell 160). This quote shows how
Winston is able to recall that Oceania had been at war with Eurasia, despite what the Party had
said. Along with this, Winston is also able remember the three survivors from the Revolution,
although most people don't remember the Revolution or the survivors. "They were men far older
than himself, relics of the ancient world, almost the last great figures left over from the heroic early
days of the party" (Orwell 67). These quotes show how Winston is able
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1984 Truth
1984 Truth In George Orwell's "1984" society is manipulated and guided by an organization called
the Party and an anonymous figure named Big Brother, who is used as God. One of the main
aspects the Party controls is truth or tries to control is truths in the society and the truth in the
minds of the individual themselves. The Party creates what they want to be true to make the
individuals ignorant so they can manipulate them easier. This twist of the truth by the Party makes
it seem like truth doesn't actually exist, but for Winston it does exist or it once did. Truth does
exist if the individual is rebellious to the extent to where it will not get them vaporized and Winston
is one of those rebels. He and others are able to experience...show more content...
This is another initiative used to keep the individual from there own truths to deprive them even
more of an identity. "Don't you see that the whole aim of Newspeak is to narrow the range of
thought? In the end we shall make thoughtcrime impossible, because there will be no words in
which to express it. It's merely a question of self–discipline, reality–control. (46)" Winston's
coworker Syme believes that Newspeak will end the issue of thougtcrime, which it seems it is
true. Newspeak is used by the Party to take away multiple meanings, expressions, individual
thoughts to make the individuals more ignorant of individualism and other ideas that could ruin
the ideas of the Party. With this language the people want be able to create thoughtcrime because
they want have the knowledge to do so. Winston doesn't care for this aspect he only thinks of
those who want be affected by the Party, the proles and at this point in time he thinks that no
matter what kind of language they have now he will continue with his own ways. The Party has a
device used to control the people to even a greater extent called the telescreen. Winston finds a
way to sort of slip around its watch on him when he is alone. "It was terribly dangerous to let your
thoughts wander when you were in any public place with range of a telescreen.
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George Orwell 1984 Comparison Essay
1984 and 2017: Not so Different In George Orwell's novel "1984" he discusses how the
government keeps their citizens under surveillance to assure they are controlled and so they do not
rebel or disrespect their form of government. Their surveillance consists of helicopters scouting
around the buildings, looking into people's homes and the telescreens that watch over people as
they live their lives. Some people may argue that we are under the same type of government. We do
not have helicopters looking into our house or telescreens that monitor us, However we do have
GPS in our phones that monitor our location at any given time, which is like a more efficient way
than using helicopters. We have cameras all around the country that monitor our every movement
which is a more advanced version of the telescreen. As time passes, we see technology advanced
enough to observe our daily lives at any given time, do you think we are under the control of big
brother?
In the novel 1984 it explains how everyone's privacy is very...show more content...
Law professor Paul Ohm, in an article titled "That's No Phone. That's My Tracker", writes "Every
year, private companies send millions of dollars developing new services that track, store and
share words, movement and even the thoughts of their customers." We see their privacy being
broken in the novel 1984 and realize that we are experiencing the same type of surveillance in our
economy. NBC News, in an article FBI Abandoned Carnivore Wiretap Software writes, "FBI...
popular commercial wiretap software because it was less expensive and had improved in it's ability
to copy E–mails and other communications of a targeted internet account without affecting their
subscribers. Government officials use this kind of technology to keep track of our information and
movement to assure we are no threat to our
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1984 By George Orwell Essay
Nelson Mandela once said "When a man is denied the right to live the life he believes in, he has
no choice but to become an outlaw." In 1984 by George Orwell, this quote has the utmost
prevalence. 1984 is a novel set in a dystopian society in which London, called "Airstrip One" in the
novel, is under the control of a totalitarian government called "The Party." The Party looks up to the
teachings and beliefs of their hero "Big Brother." This controlling government administers their
citizens by giving them no privacy, leading them to believe that they are under a constant threat of
death, and giving them no sense of freedom in any aspect of their lives. However, the main
character, Winston Smith, does not agree with the ways of thinking that The Party encourages. As
the novel progresses, the readers get to...show more content...
In 1984, Winston's job is to change any record to match what The Party believes is right. For
example, if The Party or Big Brother promise its citizens something and they are not able to
deliver on that promise, people like Winston alter every document that proves that this promise
was ever made. Like Winston says, "You could prove nothing. There was never any evidence"
(Orwell 36). The citizens of Oceania are constantly kept in the dark about the past. If there is any
memory of the type of society that existed before, it only lives in people's recollection of the past.
Recently in Colorado, this same idea has come into question in schools with the possibility of
censorship being discussed. The Jefferson County School Board proposed censorship in order to
"teach students the "benefits of the free enterprise system, respect for authority and respect for
individual rights," while avoiding lessons that condoned "civil disorder, social strife or disregard of
the law"
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1984 By George Orwell Essay
Nelson Mandela once said "When a man is denied the right to live the life he believes in, he has
no choice but to become an outlaw." In 1984 by George Orwell, this quote has the utmost
prevalence. 1984 is a novel set in a dystopian society in which London, called "Airstrip One" in the
novel, is under the control of a totalitarian government called "The Party." The Party looks up to the
teachings and beliefs of their hero "Big Brother." This controlling government administers their
citizens by giving them no privacy, leading them to believe that they are under a constant threat of
death, and giving them no sense of freedom in any aspect of their lives. However, the main character,
Winston Smith, does not agree with the ways of thinking that...show more content...
In 1984, Winston's job is to change any record to match what The Party believes is right. For
example, if The Party or Big Brother promises its citizens something and they are not able to
deliver on that promise, people like Winston alter every document that proves that this promise
was ever made. Like Winston says, "You could prove nothing. There was never any evidence"
(Orwell 36). The citizens of Oceania are constantly kept in the dark about the past. If there is any
memory of the type of society that existed before, it only lives in people's recollection of the past.
Recently in Colorado, this same idea has come into question in schools with the possibility of
censorship being discussed. The Jefferson County School Board proposed censorship in order to
"teach students the "benefits of the free enterprise system, respect for authority and respect for
individual rights," while avoiding lessons that condoned "civil disorder, social strife or disregard
of the law" (Healy). However, the problems that present from this abolition of knowledge are
simple: how can anyone learn and improve from the past, if there is no proof that the past actually
happened in the way people believe? Overall, these pieces of literature both emphasize the
importance of truth and freedom within
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