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Essay On 1984 Winston And Julia's Relationship

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What evidence is there to suggest that Winston and Julia’s relationship is genuinely based on love? Why do you think they are in a relationship? Winston hated Julia the first moment he laid eyes on her. He believed that the reason he hated her was 'because of the atmosphere of hockey-fields and cold baths and community hikes and general clean mindedness which she managed to carry about her. He disliked nearly all women.’ But Winston thought there was something more dangerous about Julia than most women. At first, their relationship appears to be a political act of rebellion, Winston expresses that ‘their embrace had been a battle, the climax, a victory. It was a blow struck against the Party. It was a political act.’ They both rebel against the control the Party has over their life, Julia’s rebellion taking the form of intimate relationships with men as she explains to Winston, “’Have you done this before?’ ‘Of course. Hundreds of times – well, scores of times, anyway.’ ‘With Party members?’ ‘Yes, always with Party members.’“ Winston’s rebellion is simply towards the party as seen in Chapter two of Part two - Orwell expresses that all Winston wanted to hear was ‘not merely the love of one person, but the animal instinct, the simple …show more content…

When Winston says, "We are the dead," Julia responds, "We are not dead yet." Julia brushes his statement aside and, in her usual manner, focuses on the physical by embracing him. Julia is preoccupied with physicality, while Winston is more introspective. Being against the Party, however, is enough to keep them connected. However, in chapter four ‘their first love-making had been simply as act of the will. But after the second time it was different.’ Winston appears to be falling in love with Julia and it seems to be mean more than just rebelling against the

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