After being beaten, starved and confronted with his greatest fear, Winston, the protagonist in the novel 1984, finally gives in to the Party’s needs. Winston and his lover, Julia are both taken into custody after they were caught for being in a relationship, something that was forbidden in the province of Oceania, the place that they live. O’Brien, an important member of the Party that is in charge of the torture of Winston, forces Winston to completely forget about his past thoughts. O’ Brien moves Winston into room 101, a room notorious for the site of horrific things. O’ Brien attaches a cage of hungry rats to Winston’s face. Because of this, Winston breaks down and becomes controlled by the Party once again. He doesn’t care about Julia and yells out to feed Julia to the rats instead. Winston lost all his love for Julia and O’ Brien lets Winston and Julia go. This is how the Party controls minds. After some time, the reader learns that Winston had been living a calm and peaceful life. He didn’t have a single thought of betraying the Party anymore and followed every rule there was. Winston saw Julia again and noticed that she changed a lot since the change. They talk for a brief period and they both apologized for betraying each other. Both of their minds have been completely shifted by O’ Brien and the rest of the Party. Winston and Julia had defied and broke many rules of Oceania just for their love for each other. They met, talked and kissed far away from the general population. They risked their own safety to be with one another. Winston and Julia thought they would never be separated, even if the Police came to arrest them. After O’ Brien made Winston go up against his greatest fear, Winston’s brian was in total control of O’ Brien. Because of O’ Brien’s actions, he didn’t even want to talk to the person that he loved, he had erased all his past thoughts about his life, and he praised Big Brother as a god, someone who he despised…
“He spun round just in time to see Mrs. Parsons dragging her son back into the doorway while the boy pocketed a catapult.” This shows how the children were treated in the society in which he lives in. Winston also has a last name which is a very common. This is ironic because Winston stands out from society and is rebellious to his government. He also starts to write his diary and questions the government unlike the rest of society.…
The main ideas in the 20 pages talk about who is Winston Smith . Winston Smith was thirty-nine years old, and had a varicose ulcer above his right ankle. He lived in Victory Mansions. He worked at a kilomentor away the Ministry of Truth. There are four apartment such as Minitrue, Minipax, Minlur, and Miniplenty. Precisely, the Ministry of love was the really frightening one because there are gorilla-faced guards. Also, Winston wrote the diary about the movie he watched. After that he thought about the things happened in the morning. That’s about a girl girl who defined as a Thought Police from Winston.And Winston did not like any girl especially the young girls. He thought young girls were the most bigoted adherents of the party. Then a…
As mentioned above, Winston was finally defeated. He can no longer think or act for himself, just how “The Party” wants their people to be. Winston looked up at a picture of Big Brother and felt loyal to him and “The Party”. Unfortunately this quote shows how “The Party” is undefeated and ultimately destroyed him. Winston was no longer capable of being his own person he was now who “The Party” wanted him to be. He was no longer himself. I believe in ending the story this way, Orwell shows how much power and strength totalitarianism has over…
This had a powerful impact on Winston. A perfect example of this occurs when O 'Brien is torturing Winston, and he talks to Winston with "the air of a teacher taking pains with a wayward but promising child" (204). O 'Brien adopts this friendly and compassionate tone in order to guide Winston to the answer he desires. Winston 's refusal to cooperate is so upsetting that "O 'Brien 's manner grew stern again" (205). He then proceeds to torture Winston until Winston repeats the correct answer to O 'Brien 's satisfaction. O 'Brien uses this method on Winston throughout the book to trick Winston into feeling safe and secure enough with O 'Brien to open up to him. Why did this continue to work? It worked because O 'Brien was able to manipulate Winston 's need to find someone to talk to who understood him. For Winston, "it did not matter whether O 'Brien was a friend or an enemy" (208). The important thing was "O 'Brien was a person who could be talked to" (208). Orwell wanted the reader to understand the lengths a person would go to, even facing the possibility of death, when their lives are suppressed by a government or entity. By sharing his fear of a totalitarian society and unveiling its nature, Orwell hoped to prevent the spread of…
At the beginning of the book Winston was a thought criminal and nothing more and he later evolves into a full-fledged rebel, joining the “infamous” Brotherhood. Winston was an extremely annoying character from the very start. His decisions and actions were extremely irrational and I was not able to connect with his character throughout the novel. Winston had accepted that he would die to the hands of the Party as soon as he thought about writing in his diary. As readers we can only assume that Winston felt differently about Big Brother than most of the Party members, and this made him feel alone and vulnerable. This causes him to trust just about anyone who does not literally tell him they are part of the Thought Police. He feels he can trust O’Brien without any proof, he trusts Julia’s note to him and meets up with her knowing full well that she could be a spy for the Thought Police and finally he trusts Mr. Charrington because his old age makes him appear fragile and helpless. Winston was an annoying character because he never hoped to accomplish anything. There was no goal in his mind, and no intention of creating one either.…
Nineteen Eighty-Four, by George Orwell, is a great novel that allows us to view the world in a different way. Winston Smith is filled with curiosity against the Party throughout the whole book. Most of his inner-questioning occurs in Part I. Many times he conforms to what The Party tells them to do, but in his mind he questions this. George Orwell is allowing us to see we must always question whatever we think is wrong. Many times we are ignorant to what is going on around us and, like Winston, we conform to everything, but sometimes we must see the reality of things.…
When we first meet Winston, our narrator, and protagonist, he languishingly fulfills mundane duties at his job. Subsequently, 1984 is able to illuminate the gormless manner in which many of us lead our lives. Lives in which conformity equates to self-degradation and personal sacrifice. Winston leads a life of servitude in solitude. His wife never loved him and left him before the events of 1984. 1984 expands upon the notion that unity amongst the oppressed is detrimental in sustaining a system of oppression.In Winston's indoctrinating society…
Focus on Winston’s state of mind, his desire for privacy and autonomy, his hope to improve the world in which he resides, the memories of the past which he alone seems to have, and (obviously) how the paperweight relates to these…
Without expressing his needs and desires Winston would lose his mind and become vulnerable to the Party. Thus enabling the Party to control Winston entirely. His mother's reaction shows his relationship of love with the past and his longing for past times and attitudes. Winston's memory of the times right before he lost his mother illustrate the historical turbulence leading up to this point. This shows a clearer picture of the economic situation emerging. Winston went through the struggle of starvation and losing his family. This is makes him realize that the proles are in some ways superior to himself and other Party members, because they have maintained their humanity and their dignity. The idea of the proles persevering despite, the trying times, allows him to retain control of his mind but more importantly it gives him faith. "If there was hope, it must lie in the proles, because only there, in those swarming disregarded masses, 85 per cent of the populatio of Oceania, could the force to destory the Party ever be generated." (72) Winston does not merely dream of his family and past events. He fantasizes about "the Golden Country". The "Golden Country" is a place with pastures, trees swaying in the wind and a clear sparkling stream. This place represents Winston's ideal, where he can be at peace and not constantly dodging the Party and its tactics. The fact that Winston thinks about this in his subconscious mind is significant because he believes (as stated in Chapter Two) that the only thing you own is your brain and your thoughts. So his dreams allow him freedom from the totalitarian world in which he lives. They represent history, and the independence associated with history. The existence of the Thought Police is testament to the Party's determination to control people's thoughts as well. The Thought Police can see everything. They are capable of finding his thoughts through his diary,…
In the beginning Winston goes against the law and secretly buys a journal to write in, even though if he is caught he will be taken away forever. He would have to face Big Brother, but Winston was willing to take the chance. Many times he reads throughout the novel “ War is Peace, Freedom is Slavery, Ignorance is Strength”. Which is the official saying of the Party. While attempting to write in the journal Winston found himself only being able to write “Down with Big Brother” repeatedly. He always found himself confused on what to do but always believed that he would never conform into one of them!…
The first conflict would be individuality. Why? Well, Winston would always try to convince himself that he will not be one of the rest. With the “down with big brother”page eighteen .This quote would represent the anger that Winston feels against big brother wanting to bring him down so it would be all over with. The fact, that everybody has to dress up in the party uniform. Everybody is tricked into believing the lies and propaganda of the Ministry of Truth. if you choose to be an individual as Winston wanted to so, you would be sent to Room 101, get re-educated, and wiped out of existence. Winston knew that everything the party said was a bunch of crap and that the Proles was his only chance at freedom. As the end comes Winston has completely lost his individuality, and has lost his identity and meaning. Winston is worse off in the end of the novel because he has lost his meaning.…
His role in the story is that he works as a writer. Winston works as a writer who tries to rewrite the past. Winston tries to escape the rules that he lives by, he feels like there are secrets to the government that he lives by. In the story, he meet this girl names Julia that later became his lover. They both end up secretly living together and they both try to find the outer way on how to find out more information about the government of Oceania.…
When a person’s peace of mind is compromised, so is their sanity. The early parts of the novel display the thoughts of Winston as he commits the epitome of thoughtcrime, writing “DOWN WITH BIG BROTHER”, repeatedly. This series of events being placed in the beginning of the novel throws the reader right into the oppressive government that is The Party, and shows the reader what they are all about. Rebellions are started by those who feel oppressed by their superiors, people who feel like they have no way out unless they fight their way out, start a revolution. Winston’s feelings of oppression are transferred into intense desires to rebel against The Party, specifically wanting to break one of their cardinal rules, no sexual encounters with anyone. He meets a fellow member of The Party who feels an urge to rebel, it is a selfish urge however as she only enjoys the personal thrill. Her name is Julia, and she has an affair with Winston to rebel against The Party, the two fall in love. This proves how quickly rebellious thoughts can turn into life changing scenarios, with Winston and Julia both committing crimes that can change their lives…
Winston, we learn works for the Ministry of Truth, which handles news, education, and the fine arts that all relate to the party. Within the Ministry of Truth, also known as MiniTruth in Newspeak, Winston makes corrections to the errors or misprints in the papers. However, these ‘misprints’ and ‘errors’ are really misprints and errors, and Winston knows this. Quietly he rebels with his thoughts even though he knows if he were ever caught there would be severe repercussions. This is why in the opening pages of the book we find Winston with his back turned to the telescreen. He had recently bought a small journal from an antique store. He knows this is a dangerous, but Winston does it anyways. He does it because it was his was of rebelling. He knew that it wouldn’t matter because “Either the future would resemble the present, in which case it would not listen to him, or it would be different from it, and his predicament would be meaningless.” (Orwell 7) yet he continues. Winston writes of the propaganda and the war films with vivid deaths that really opened his…