Winston Smith Essay

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    Winston Smith: False Rebel Winston Smith, just an average middle class man, working at The Ministry of Truth, which is associated with new, media, and entertainment. His job at Minitrue is to destroy and rewrite pieces of history according to The Party’s agenda. Because of his profession, he sees people and events being lost forever. One instance that Winston remembers vividly, was when he found a picture of men in New York, during the same time they were supposedly committing treason in Eurasia

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    Winston Smith is the main character of a novel, Nineteen Eighty-Four written by George Orwell and published in 1949. The novel presents an imaginary future of 1984 governed by a group known as the Party, whose ruler and dictator is a Big Brother. The Party controls all aspects of people’s lives, including their thoughts. The name of the state is Oceania where Winston is a resident. He loathes the social systems that govern the citizens therein. They are ruled by intense fear. They have no civil

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    It was a bright cold day in April, and the clocks were striking thirteen. Winston Smith, his chin nuzzled into his breast in an effort to escape the vile wind, slipped quickly through the glass doors of Victory Mansions, though not quickly enough to prevent a swirl of gritty dust from entering along with him. The hallway smelt of boiled cabbage and old rag mats. At one end of it a coloured poster, too large for indoor display, had been tacked to the wall. It depicted simply an enormous face, more

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    Winston Smith is given a strange yet intriguing book from O’Brien called The Theory and Practice of Oligarchical Collectivism by Emmanuel Goldstein after telling O’Brien that he is a rebel. Winston is told that this book will help him understand more about the “Brotherhood” and opposing the Party. In this book, Goldstein supports the idea of the government manipulating society. He talks about why Oceania is really in a war in a comprehensible and understanding way so all people can realize how corrupt

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    Why Did Orwell End 1984

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    By the end of 1984, Winston had been completely broken down and purged of his rebellious mind and instincts. Big Brother told Winston throughout the novel that he would eventually be killed. However, Winston was not actually physically killed. He was stripped of his own thoughts and characteristics that made him himself, therefore his self being had been killed. Many readers dislike the novel’s conclusion and find it decidedly bleak. Why did Orwell end the novel this way? In the beginning of the

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    Winston is a blubbering fool, but at the beginning of the book, he was kinda cool. He had a nice place to live and had a nice job which allowed him to live a peaceful life, but he had go and mess it up by writing in that dumb diary and hooking up with Julia. He was a records editor at the Ministry of Truth which allowed him to have some perks such as Victory Gin and Victory Cigarettes. All Winston had to do was to do his job and change records when they needed to be; no harm done. The first

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    Charrington’s betrayal to Winston and Julia, O'Brien betrayal to Winston, and Winston’s ultimate betrayal to Julia. Prior to Winston’s betrayal to Julia, the readers sees the tune "Under the spreading chestnut tree I sold you and you sold me." Orwell writes this to foreshadow Winston’s fate at the end of the novel and his ultimate betrayal to Julia. In the beginning of the book, Winston is introduced as a party member who works in the Minister of Truth. The readers realizes that Winston has a slight rebellious

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    “Big Brother,” Winston needed something to hold on to something as simple as a glass paperweight. George Orwell’s novel 1984 gave Winston a tangible object that ties in and incorporates both the recollection along with the pureness of Winston’s past and the obscure place of Oceania. This glass paperweight symbolizes security and freedom throughout Winston’s life in the unpleasant place under the control of the party. An impression to the past is made throughout the novel when Winston discovers a beautiful

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    Soviet Union 1984

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    1984 ”Big brother is watching you” is a famous quote from George Orwell’s 1984 (1949). Taking place in a dystopian world, Orwell created the classical warning of a world without freedom of speech, where you as an individual must obey the rules of the authorities, otherwise your life was at risk. Although the book takes place in 1984, it was written in 1949. At the time, the soviet union had it’s rise, with Joseph Stalin as a main character. A man who was and is known for his dictatorship and inhumane

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    "For the first time he perceived that if you want to keep a secret you must also hide it from yourself." (Orwell 283). This is one of the most probative quotes in the novel, revealing in just few words what the work mainly tries to underline. First of all, because it is one of the most powerful revelations to appear in the novel and second, because it is the bridge that connects two worlds apparently different – Orwellian writing and Freudian concept about the unconscious. In the pages that follow

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