Looking back in the book 1984 there were many issues that were happening such as Winston and Julia are put in a cage, Room 101 and how bad it was, and Winston and Julia being careful when talking to each other. But, there were many other issues that happened in the book also. We can tell that Winston really loves Julia and he would do anything to be with her and talk to her. But, when Winston’s fear really did come true he had to turn the table and blame everything on Julia so he wouldn’t get killed. Even though talking to each other was hard, Winston did manage a way to try and be with…
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.…
Winston made a very unwise decision: having an affair with Julia, which impacted the rest of his life. The Party was very anti-sex oriented and Winston’s encounter with Julia contradicted the expectations of society.…
Specifically, Julia expresses how she feels when she says, "'I am not interested in the next generation"(Orwell 156). Julia does not care to think about the future and what would happen like, but would rather think about herself now and what she will do. She only cares about the present of herself while Winston cares for the present of himself and society and the future generations. He questions what is going happen and thinks about why society is like this. In 1984, George Orwell explained how Julia feels when he wrote “She seemed to think it just as natural that ‘they’ should want to rob you of your pleasures as that you should want to avoid being caught. She hated the Party, and said so in the crudest words… Except when it touched her own life she had no interest in Party doctrine,” (Orwell 131). Julia is concerned on why they take away happiness from society. Winston explains the passion she has when she talks about the Party. Julia is a woman who likes to enjoy herself, and she isn’t allowed to so that is why she is against the Party. Winston and Julia think differently on what is wrong with society and why they care for…
Due to the dystopian society, the totalitarian government is enforcing surveillance which plays a negative impact on the characters and the plot. Throughout the novel 1984, it is noticeable that surveillance throughout the city plays a deep role in the growth of the characters. Surveillance had an underlying impact on the love connection between the main characters Winston and Julia. When engaging in a love affair, it is vital to spend time with one another and to show affection. The surveillance that the Party has enforced upon the society hindered their love connection and the ability to pursue a serious relationship. By not allowing citizens to show love and affection to one another, they are enforcing loneliness…
Furthermore proving this idea is when Winston and Julia are having sex. Winston says this to the readers “No emotion was was pure, because everything was mixed up with fear had hatred. Their embrace had been a battle, the climax a victory. It was a blow struck against the Party. It was a political act,” (Orwell 126) This explain Winston’s idea of sex that it’s simply a superficial way to get revenge against the party not to love. But some people might say Winston truly did love Julia, if so why did Winston betrayal Julia, when facing rats that were attach to him. This is proving the idea that all rebellion could always be…
Winston wants to take a more effective approach and thinks of ways to completely undermine the Party, such as the Proles rebelling. He also takes the most incautious approaches. He buys a diary, commits Thoughtcrime constantly, and has sexual relations with Julia. He also takes a huge step into the dangerous zone when he asks around about the past. Julia’s resistance method is solely for herself, she only does what she desire while Winston does what he thinks will benefit the future.…
While it can be looked upon in more depth, it is stated clearly that the lovemaking that the characters share is not actually love, rather just an impure “political act” to rebel against the Party. For example, Orwell writes, “No emotion was pure, because everything was mixed up with fear and hatred. Their embrace had been a battle, the climax a victory. It was a blow struck against the Party. It was a political act” (138). There are many examples in this novel that clearly portray this relationship as just a simple act of rebellion, this being one palpable example. The author describes their embrace as a battle, implying a battle against the government; their “climax a victory,” implying that that climax had just been what they were hoping for, a blow to the face of Big Brother. This embrace screams, “Look at us, we wanted to battle against you and we were handed the trophy just following the climax.” However, Winston might as well have also been yelling out that he had no idea who the woman was that he just had sex with since “even now he had not found out her surname or her address. However, it made no difference [to him], for it was inconceivable that they could ever meet indoors or exchange any kind of written communication” (139). With this stated, once again, it shows that Winston is not concerned about the actual human that Julia is, rather…
Winston then met a woman named Julia. Winston and Julia became secret lovers. They first met when Julia gave a piece of paper to Winston saying I Love you. Throughout the novel Julia and Winston snuck around and had sex, which was another illegal law that was prohibited unless it was to produce a child. This negative utopia was created to help the people in England but instead made them scared and their whole lives were already set in stone.…
They learn that they both have betrayed each other and no longer feel the same towards one another anymore. Since the last time Winston saw Julia, he opens up his eyes to all the changes she has undergone. When Julia and Winston meet up in the park, Orwell describes her changes, “She had changed in some ill-defined way. Her face was swallower, and there was a long scar… across her forehead and temple. Her waist had grown thicker and, in a surprising way, had stiffened… [like] a corpse… by its rigidity and awkwardness to handle… her body felt like that.…
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.…
Someone who plays a large role in Winston’s life, is Julia. Julia’s slim, young figure causes Winston to begin making a lot of risky, secret trips to meet her. Julia’s attractiveness isn’t the only reason that Winston likes to be with her that much. While he enjoys someone to , he also enjoys that he can share his hatred for the Party with someone, and talk about it freely. These monthly trips bring…
Any signs of physical attraction to another member or Prole can result in becoming an “unperson”. “He thought of her naked, youthful body, as he had seen in his dream. He had imagined her a fool like all the rest of them, her head stuffed with lies and hatred, her belly full of ice. A kind of fever seized him at the thought that he might lose her, the white youthful body might slip away from him!” (p. 109-110). This quote proves that Winston indeed has a physical attraction to Julia, but not because he loves her, but because he wants to prove a point against the Party without them actually knowing. By stating that she is “a fool like all the rest of them, her head stuffed with lies and hatred, her bell full of ice”, Winston attempts to mock the Party by presenting a case where he has attracted a devoted Party member and therefore broken their stronghold. But as later seen in the novel, physical attraction may not only be the main idea behind the ‘love’ Winston has for…
His hatred later elevated to the point where it was no longer confined to his mind or the paper, but it was shared with a companion, Julia. When Julia had told Winston that she adored sex, Winston thought, “That was above all what he wanted to hear. Not merely the love of one person, but the animal…
Winston’s rebellion first takes place on more of an intellectual level, including reading and thought crime, unlike Julia’s who takes rebellion on more of a physical level. They both choose to think for themselves in pursuing an intimate relationship together. Winston not only ignored The Party’s teachings of how love was wrong, but, they ignored the possible consequences of doing such crimes. Even when he rents the room in Charrington to share with Julia he realizes all of the trouble he can get into, but, he is so wrapped in lust it blinds…