Dally Winston is meaner, colder and tougher member of the greasers. Ponyboy describes him as ‘towheaded and shifty-eyed, Dally was anything but handsome. Yet in his hard face there was character, pride, and a savage defiance of the world.’…
One of the quotes in the book 1984 was: “Who controls the past controls the future. Who controls the present controls the past.” The party slogan appeared twice in the book, once in Book One, Chapter III, when Winston was thinking about party’s control and history. The quote also appeared once in Book Three, Chapter II, when Winston talked to O’Brien about nature of the past when he was a prisoner in the Ministry of Love. It is significant to the book because the quote portrays the totalitarian government. Having control of the past secures control of the future and if the past was perfect, citizens would try to maintain that glorious past. Likewise, the Party had control of the present. For example, every history book praised Party ideology,…
Through the novel, Winston hides his newfound thoughtcrime as best as he can, he hides his thoughts from his facial features and the scratching pen from the telescreens. Even as he works in his job, he is collecting and retaining information regarding the lies and truths (if any) from the Party. Winston is essentially a messenger, a messiah, ready to deliver the true word to the people of Oceania, if not for the potential threat of death before he could even utter one word. As Winston progresses he only learns and recalls copious amounts of information and retains what he edits thanks to the simplification of newspeak, and keeps it in the back of his mind to fester and grow into even deeper hate. Collecting this information and recalling it…
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…
1983. From a novel or play of literary merit, select an important character who is a villain. Then, in a well-organized essay, analyze the nature of the character 's villainy and show how it enhances meaning in the work. Do not merely summarize the prompt.…
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.…
“Winston loathed this exercise, which sent shooting pains all the way from is heels to his buttocks and often ended by bringing on another coughing fit. The past, he reflected had not merely been altered, it had been actually destroyed. For how could you establish even the most obvious fact when there existed no record outside your own memory?” p.g 33 This quote is taken from Part 1. Winston is following what The Inner Party is forcing everyone in the party to do. Of course Winston outwardly conforms with the exercises, but in his mind he neglects and speculates everything the Party does. It is obvious he questions many times the way of the Party.…
Winston is speaking with Julia in regards to about betrayal and their loyalty to one another. This quote display that their true feelings for one another is the true definition of loyalty and if it were to be broken that there will be real betrayal will be inflected. In addition, this quote also shows that the greatest betrayal is one that comes from the heart rather than the mouth. This shows that Winston is loyal is to Julia and will always be, because he truly believes that loyal comes from deep within rather than words. He believes that one's heart speaks more than words can.…
If life is but a dream, do we ever wake up? Or are dreams just a fragment of our imagination? Do they hold any relevance to our inner most desires and thoughts? Revealing one's character or repressed feelings can be known by in our dreams. In the totalitarian society of the novel Nineteen Eighty-Four by George Orwell, the main character Winston Smith relies on his subconscious mind to maintain his sanity.…
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!…
When he was first taken captive, the glass paperweight he had purchased smashed against the ground, representing the destruction of the last piece of the past Winston possessed. Once inside the Ministry of Love, Winston attempts to stay strong in his beliefs during his fight against O’Brien. At first, he is successful, but eventually he can no longer stand the torture he is put through. O’Brien continuously asks Winston how many fingers he is holding up, while putting him through a great deal of pain, in order to try to convey to him the importance of Doublethink, and eventually Winston says “‘You will kill me if you do that again. Four, five, six – in all honesty I don’t know.’” (Orwell, 264) This occurrence is the beginning of Winston’s surrender to the Party, due to the immense amount of pain and stress he is being put through. The final issue that O’Brien intended on fixing was Winston’s love for Julia, and Winston shows that his love still exists when he yells out her name after dreaming one day. Shortly thereafter, he is taken to Room 101, in which all prisoners are eventually put in. While in the room, he betrays his love Julia due to his phobia of rats, when he yells out “Do it to Julia…I don’t care what you do to her. Tear her face off, strip her to the bones. Not me! Julia!” (Orwell, 300) A clear example of the loss of Winston’s individuality, however, comes shortly after this event in the novel. When Winston is in the Chestnut Tree Café, and he hears about the trouble Oceania is having in the war, “successive layers of feeling, in which one could not say which layer was undermost – struggled inside him.” (Orwell, 303) This brief outburst of emotion within Winston passes quickly, as he forces himself to Doublethink,…
By depicting the most horrific forms of dystopias, both George Orwell and Terry Gilliam successfully satirised the bureaucratic, totalitarian governments at their extreme. For this monumental task of lampooning the modern political system with references to past philosophers and authors, both Orwell and Gilliam incorporates very modest main characters. The protagonists Sam Lowry and Winston Smith both do not effectively fit into the classic ‘Hero’ type of behaviours, but are closer to an ordinary, or even sub-ordinary people which we can easily relate to. As both Nineteen-Eighty Four and Brazil mock the same obstinate government with the latter being a clear reference and a parody to the former, the two main central characters share similar…
Winston's rebellious character portrays him as a radical, who has the strength to defy the party and its principles. Winston and Julia secretly meet and it becomes apparent that she shares his rebellious ways. Learning that she has engaged in sexual acts with numerous Inner Party members, Winston finds hope. Winston and Julia, however, rebel against the Party for different reasons. Winston wants to end the harsh oppression of the party while Julia's rebellious acts are more self-centered. Winston first demonstrates his hatred of the Party and Big Brother when he writes in his diary "DOWN WITH BIG BROTHER". He knows at that very moment a camera might see the written words on the page. Winston continues to flirts with possible arrest by the "Thought Police" for a thought crime, which is any written or though of rebellion against the Party.…
From the beginning of the novel rebellion had always been a part of Winston, but as time went on rebellion from the powerful Big Brother consumed him. After his hysteric outburst on paper on writing “DOWN WITH BIG BROTHER”, Winston reveals that, “He had committed- would still have committed, even if he had never set pen on paper- the essential crime. Thought crime..." This is the first time Winston allows his feeling to surface through the suppression of the party. Within him there is sheer hatred for Big Brother, enough to sporadically scream his demise through pen and paper. More importantly, he knew he committed a crime and that it was inevitable. Though he knows that what he has done cannot be changed he accepts its inevitability. Rebellion was rooted in the deepest part of his mind as Thoughtcrime and it was inescapable.…
In Books 1 & 2, Emmanuel Goldstein is introduced as the leader of the Brotherhood, the main radicalist group aiming to take down the Party. Winston and his fellow comrades are taught from a young age to hate Goldstein, making him the center of the two minutes of hate. As described in the book, “A hideous ecstasy of fear and vindictiveness, a desire to kill, to torture, to smash faces in with a sledge-hammer, seemed to flow through the whole group of people like an electric current, turning one even against one's will into a grimacing, screaming lunatic." These descriptions help show how much the citizens of Oceania hated Goldstein. These two minutes of hate help keep citizens in check by making them hate their only source of hope. Winston has constant doubts throughout Book 1 about his loyalty to the Party, making him become more and…