Nineteen Eighty-Four

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    In George Orwell’s book, Nineteen Eighty-Four, a dictatorial group called the Big Brother is said to always be watching you. Not only does this group inspect individuals from posters throughout the city, but also they listen and watch you through private telescreens, which is basically a two-way television. In this type of world it is easier to simply assume that you are always being watched, in fact that 's how many of the characters we encounter throughout this book act. Something should be clicking

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    In Nineteen Eighty Four, George Orwell locates his novel in a politically dystopian society. A dystopia is a “bad place”, being translated from the Greek words dis topos. This term was created to be seen as the opposite of a Utopia after the novel Utopia was written by Thomas More. Dystopian novels are written to daunt the reader of how future societies will turn out. The term has become more common in today 's society and is translated into, a dark or unpleasant future. Nineteen Eighty Four shows

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    In the novel Nineteen Eighty-Four by George Orwell, there are several elements of dystopian fiction that are present throughout the book. Just five of the elements present in the novel are the presence of a figurehead, the use of propaganda, the use of fear to control people, the use of surveillance, and the restrictions of freedoms. Together these elements come together and leave a large message about a societal trend that was occurring at the time of the novel's creation. Individually, though,

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    Known for being one of the most controversial novels of all time, George Orwell’s Nineteen Eighty-Four transforms the reader’s understanding of oppressive government, but also of the power of language and the danger of its confinement. As said by Aristotle, “If it is argued that one who makes an unfair use of such faculty of speech may do a great deal of harm, this objection applies equally to all good things except virtue . . . for as these, rightly used, may be of the greatest benefit, so, if wrongly

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    George Orwell’s dystopian novel, Nineteen Eighty-Four, demonstrates that a person’s ability to remain steadfast can be easily compromised due to humans holding other values above their ethical principles. Within the fictional world of Oceania, citizens reject values of loyalty to family, wealth, security and love in order to devote themselves to the absolute ruler, Big Brother. Under the ruling of the Inner Party, the rectitude of its citizens is battered and distorted. Doublethink is a mechanism

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    The year was 1984 when the movie Nineteen Eighty-Four had premiere. That was 31 years ago. To say that our world has turned into the totalitarian state like 1984 would be an overstatement. The planet has not developed into a constant dispute between the most powerful states. Still there are a few parallels between our society and the one that Winston lived in. First, in the movie Big Brother, the leader of the party that rules over Oceania, has constant track of the inhabitants with the telescreens

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    Nineteen Eighty-Four was a book written by George Orwell based on a dystopian society turned somewhat mental. George Orwell was but a pen name for Eric Arthur Blair; Orwell was born in colonial India, attended boarding school in England, and there discovered the harsh reality of prejudice within his community. At age eighteen, Orwell graduated from his boarding school and became a part of the Burmese Indian Imperial Police or BIIP. There he saw the abuses of power and grew to hate imperialism, thus

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    Nineteen Eighty Four, the classic dystopian text of George Orwell, serves as a political warning to future generations about the dangers of totalitarian societies. Orwell urgently relays this warning through the use of various powerful symbols such as doublethink and the telescreen, which reinforce the idea of psychological and physical control. Orwell also uses symbols such as Winston’s journal and the glass paperweight to reinforce the idea of intellectual rebellion and the desire to diverge against

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    Nineteen Eighty Four is a novel about a dystopian society in which the government exemplifies full control over its citizens. In this totalitarian government, George Orwell writes about a guy named Winston and a girl named Julia, who are both against the government. Although this book was written in the past, it foreshadows many of the events that would take place in the future of some real world countries. George Orwell was trying to warn people of the dangers of a totalitaristic government through

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    In the society named Oceania, magnificently crafted by George Orwell in his dystopian novel Nineteen Eighty-Four, the leadership of the controlling party, Ingsoc, claims to be ameliorating the lives of all people living under its “benevolence.” However, the degree to which each individual benefits from Ingsoc’s largesse, varies depending upon a person’s status within Oceania. For example, the simple prole, short for proletariat, resides at the bottom of Oceania’s social heap and is the largest Ingsoc

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