1. Orwell, George. 1984. New York: New American Library, 1977. Print. 2. I used pages 1-7, 9, 10, 18, 28, 35, 69, 105-110, 113, 124-126, 156-158, 167-179, 184-185, 221-225, 239, 244-255, 260, 277, 281-287, 290, 293-298. 3. This book takes place in 1984 in Oceania. 4. Protagonist: Winston is the main character, and we read his thoughts. He is special, as main characters often are. His difference has to do with the fact that he doesn’t simply accept what the Party tells him to. He is older, middle-aged, and not described as the fittest or healthiest person. Antagonist: The ultimate enemy is the government that seems to control nearly everyone’s lives, except the proles, those not in the Inner or Outer Party. It is totalitarian. Winston privately resists its rule and control. …show more content…
This is where another group comes in. Winston had heard rumors of an opposing force to the Party, the Brotherhood. He is not sure whether or not there really is one, but is interested in it. It more or less serves as false hope. He, actually, believes one employee of the Inner Party to be a part of the Brotherhood. His name is O’Brien. His reason behind this is not convincing, as he, essentially, just gets a feeling. Another person who is singled out, is Julia. Now at first, Winston believes she’s dangerous. She is young, fit, beautiful, and, well, sexy. That is precisely why he also dislikes her, but his feelings are completely transformed after one interaction. While walking, Julia and Winston literally bump into each other. She falls to the ground, and as Winston helps her up, she secretly slips a note into his hand. He waits until a safer time to examine it and is shocked to find it read, “I love you.” This note starts a forbidden relationship. They begin to meet at various locations, always being cautious and conscious of who could be watching, until they find a small apartment that they believe is
Throughout the novel, Winston is always hiding his thoughts about the Party and about Big Brother, although he is completely against it. However, in order to ensure that he does not get caught, he must act as though he loves them and agrees with their power over society. Surveillance is shaping these characters to be a perfect representation of what they are expected to be, instead of being who they are.
O’Brien is determined to enhance Winston’s beliefs of the Inner Party. However, O’Brien’s motives are not to brainwash or torture Winston; instead, O’Brien is reintegrating Winston back into the mind of the society. “If you are a man, Winston, you are the last man” (295).
We learn that the dark-haired girl is named Julia. She and Winston meet out in the country, almost similar to the Golden Country in Winston’s dreams. Julia assures him that the hide-out is safe from microphones and that they would be able to hear if someone is near. He wonders why she shows attraction for him and it’s due to the fact that she knew he was against the Party from the moment she saw his face. Julia portrays the ideal Party member but in her private time, her true thoughts are revealed and they are the same as Winston’s.
Tired of feeling the way he is, with the monotonous struggle of everyday life Winston decides to oppose the party in more real ways; and begins to deviate from certain set behaviors to free himself from this bondage of the party. “To the future or to the past, to a time when thought is free, when men are different from one another and do not live alone-to a time when truth exists and what is done cannot be undone”(25-26). He has realized what the government does to people; how everyone is made to be the same, where no one is allowed to think on their own. The party is omnipotent in all affairs and he will not go along with it anymore. Winston has made up his mind; he is going to do everything he can to bring down the party. He and Julia go to O’Brien’s apartment one afternoon, and Winston’s true hatred is revealed. “We believe that there is some kind of conspiracy, some kind of secret organization working against the Party,
In order for the “Big Brother” to maintain this ideology, the ruler needs to have highly organized system and individuals to follow each and every task. In the novel, Oceania’s society has reached the level of brainwashing. In order for anyone to conquer such a vast and complicated system, the individual will need a highly-organized plan and a sophisticated mind to carry through. Winston possesses neither of these traits; therefore he was doomed to fail.
We can look at novel 1984 where Winston is a member of the outer party, this means that he is a regular person from the street. While he is under the reign of Big Brother there is not much that he can do, Everything has to go Big Brothers way, he has totalitarian reign over the people of Oceania. They must think as they are told and if they say two plus two equals five then two plus two equals five there
Winston 's current situation working there is the major factor which lets him realize how Big brothers hold back the peoples opportunity to freedom. However, Winston keeps his thoughts and hate about Big Brother and the party for his own secret in his diary because the party will not allow anyone keeping a rebellious idea. After a while Big Brother realizes Winston’s suspicious behavior and has an individual named O’Brien sent to watch over Winston. O’Brien is a very smart man from the Ministry of truth, who is a member of the 'inner party '(the higher class). Winston comes to trust him and shares his inner secrets and ideas about the rebellion against Big Brother. O 'Brien tells Winston about a man named Emmanuel Goldstein whom claims to know the leader of the rebels against Big Brother. This also promises Winston to get a copy of the book he Longley desires. Suddenly O’Brien goes against Winston as Big Brother had already planned. Showing major secretive external conflict.
Believing that O’Brien is a member of the Brotherhood and he too is opposed to the Party, Julia and Winston pay him a visit at his apartment. O’Brien tells the two that they must be willing to lose their own lives in order to take down Big Brother; however, when he asks if they would be willing to betray one another, they refuse. Winston’s hatred for Big Brother has accumulated so much that he is now willing to die solely for the sake of taking down the Party. At the start of the novel, Winston could not stand the thought of his own death. The thought haunted him, and he was not prepared for that to happen. As the story progresses and Winston is being oppressed in more and more ways, he despises the Party more than ever, and eventually is
Despite Winston's passionate hatred for the Party and his desire to test the limits of the Party's power, his capacity to carry out action against the Party is burdened (i.e. lacking positive freedom) by his intense paranoia and overriding belief that he will ultimately suffer scrutiny and brutal torture for the crimes he
In 1984, by George Orwell, the protagonist, Winston, is one of the
The insidious manifestation and nature of the Party’s power culminates through their manipulation of all aspects of life. History becomes a palimpsest wherein anything can be altered so as to favor the doctrines of the party. Language is slowly becoming eradicated and “ It was intended that when Newspeak had been adopted once and for all and Oldspeak forgotten, a heretical thought should be literally unthinkable, at least so far as thought is dependent on words”. This illustrates that the party wishes to create orthodoxy wherein independent and singular thought which repudiate any vestiges of humanity and digress from the principles of the party are blatantly impossible. Winston is of the belief that
Julia is first shown as a sexless figure since she is a member of the Anti-Sex League. When Winston first sees Julia, he does not know her name. He only knows that she works in the Fiction Department. Winston “disliked nearly all women, and especially the young and pretty ones. It was always the women, and above all the young ones, who were the most bigoted adherents of the Party, the swallowers of slogans, the amateur spies and nosers-out of unorthodoxy” (10). This demonstrates that at the beginning of the novel, he does not like Julia. He thinks that she is dangerous, and wants to get him in trouble. He thinks that she is a member of the thought police and that she will turn him in. This proves the assumptions of men and how Winston just assumes that Julia is dangerous. According to Meia, a writer for Medium, “Winston started out hating Julia simply because he wanted to have sex with her. In knowing, or assuming, that that would never happen, Winston finds himself cheated out of something that he feels he ought to have” (Meia). Winston does not like Julia because he feels like she will get him in trouble, but he has an attraction toward her. With her Anti-sex League sash, he thinks that she will follow the rules of the Party. He feels like if he would have sex with the young and beautiful Julia without getting caught, then that would be the ultimate rebel and they will defeat Big Brother. Winston thinks that all women in Oceania are all complete followers of the Party and will not disobey the laws. However, Julia's appearance deceives Winston, and he finds out that she is unorthodox and has the same intention as he
He first sees an inner party member, O'Brien, who he believes is in the brotherhood to take down big brother- the party’s leader. Marcus also meets a girl who is not exactly what he thinks, but soon starts to find out that she wants something more than just an ally. She sends Winston a note saying “I love you.” and they soon begin a forbidden affair, always on the lookout for the higher party spying on them. As their affair begins to flourish, Winston's hatred for the party grows more and he feels it is time to overthrow the party. He counts on the help of his brotherhood and friends, but he may have made one big mistake that can cost him everything.
Winston and Julia continue to meet in the room above the shop, and eventually, the two go together to meet O’Brien at his home. O’Brien turns off his
The Party controls freedom with extreme caution. The problem with controlling freedom is that people will become very anxious of things and begin to think freely. The Party does not want one to think freely. “Thoughtcrime, they called it. Thoughtcrime was not a thing that could be concealed forever. You might dodge successfully for a while, even for years, but sooner or later they were bound to get you” (Orwell 19). Winston decides to take it into his own hands and deal with it himself. He betrays the Party and