Winston smith

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    In the novel 1984 by George Orwell, Winston Smith is a character plagued by an oppressive party that controls and monitors its entire population. On a journey to meet a young girl in the countryside, Winston's mood, setting and point of view are used with Orwell's diction and imagery to portray a complex tone. Describing Winston as apprehensive and nervous throughout the beginning of the chapter because he does not know what is going to happen and he is anxious to meet this new girl but fearful

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    Speaker: The speaker of this piece would be the main character Winston Smith. According to the text it states, “‘Would you believe, he said, ‘that till this moment I didn’t know what color your eyes were’” (Orwell, 119). By analyzing the quote above, one could see that Winston is the speaker. Winston Smith is a 39 year old man who works as a record editor at the Ministry of Truth. He makes his points because he hates how the party lies to society and manipulates their minds. Based on the text states

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    7. One specific trait that Winston takes credit to is his rebelliousness. Winston hates the Party so much that he will do anything to bring it down, and he does that by testing how far the Party will go. He commits several crimes throughout the novel, from having an illegal relationship with Julia, to secretly becoming apart of the anti-Party Brotherhood, and to writing awful things about Big Brother in his diary. Winston is sure that the Thought Police will capture him immediately after he writes

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    “War is peace. Freedom is slavery. Ignorance is strength” (Orwell). This mantra was burned into the minds of the citizens of Oceania, or future London, where Winston Smith, the protagonist, lives. The citizens of Oceania are constantly being bombarded with propaganda in favor of Big Brother and the Party, who leads and governs them, which brings the majority of them into complete submission. In the book, 1984, George Orwell shows how technology is used by the Party to monitor, brainwash, and provoke

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    Manipulation of the Mind After capturing Winston Smith for thought crime, O’Brien describes real power as “tearing human minds to pieces and putting them together again in new shapes of your choosing” (Orwell 266). By this he explains that true power is being able to choose what people minds think. In George Orwell’s novel, 1984, Winston, a Ministry of Truth worker who hates the Party, slowly starts to disobey the Party rules such as having freedom of thought and individuality. He entrusts

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    Winston Smith, a worker for the Outer Party is dissatisfied with how his life is going. He decides to take up measures to rebel against the government by writing in a diary and even committing the sin of “thoughtcrime”. During the novel, he encounters Julia, another woman who wants to help stop The Party. Together they fall into love, or at least what they perceived as love, and met in secret contemplating the fact that they could be taken prisoner any day. They do get taken prisoner and are betrayed

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    1984 Chapter 1-3 Summary

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    In April, 1984, Winston Smith returns to his apartment in Victory Mansions. Winston is an insignificant official in the Party, the totalitarian political regime that rules Oceania (this used to be England). In his apartment, an instrument called a telescreen spreads propaganda, and allows the Thought Police to monitor the actions of citizens. Winston works at the Ministry of Truth, where he alters historical records to match the Party’s official version of past events. Winston pulls out a small diary

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    may be required to believe, similar to other obviously false slogans by the Party in the novel. It is contrasted with the phrase "two plus two makes four", the obvious (by definition) – but politically inexpedient – truth. Orwell's protagonist, Winston Smith, uses the phrase to wonder if the State might declare "two plus two equals five" as a fact; he ponders whether, if everybody believes it, does that make it true? Basically he is saying that as long as the party-(which has brainwashed all the citizens)

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    also known as ‘The Party’ has full control of its citizen’s freedom. They do this in a way of manipulating them psychologically, historically, slogans and propaganda under the symbolic name called Big Brother. Being a part of the Outer Party, Winston Smith experiences strong resentment towards The Party’s views and how it controls the past. A crucial apparatus known as the Thought Police is used by The Party to psychologically suppress their citizen’s natural reactions to situations, emotions, and

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    George Orwell’s book 1984 was published in 1984, and portrays Orwell’s vision of the future. The reader observes a dystopian society, by the name of Oceania. In this dystopian world, there is one supreme ruler, Big Brother. Winston Smith is the protagonist trying to stay in line, but after he committed thoughtcrime, he began to sway. In the world of Oceania there is much surveillance, propaganda, stripping of humanity, and control of the people. Orwell is trying to warn future generations and societies

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