The glass paperweight in 1984 is coral colored. It represents Winston. The paperweight is glass and is transparent. Winston’s life is like the paperweight because it is clear to Winston what his life is like and what would happen in his life. Throughout the book, Winston knew that one day, he would get caught by the Thought police. At the end of the novel, Winston actually did get caught by the Thought police.…
In 1984, George Orwell, English novelist, delivers a dystopian fiction novel about the future possible world of 1984. Orwell creates the character, Winston Smith, the protagonist of the novel. Winston Smith is solely against the party and is curious as to where his rebellion against the party will lead him. While still attending hate week, working for the party, and being under surveillance 24/7, Smith attempts to figure out his way to the Brotherhood. Along with Smith’s hate for the party, Orwell uses rhetorical devices such as tone and imagery to develop Winston’s character.…
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…
Winstons statement is vague and must be properly addressed before we can access its validity. The word hope in itself is deliberately ambiguous as Winston fails to mention what this hope is for. Winston may be talking about hope of revolution and the overthrow of government as a horse shaking flies. For this there is ultimately almost no hope in the proles due to the futility expressed in the novels ending as even our socially aware narrator succumbs to the guile of Big Brother. However, much more than this Winston may be talking about hope for the future, hope for freedom from social oppression and the dictatorial regime of the Party, hope for the end goal of this revolution. Winston writes this statement having just described the way in which the Party has manipulated sex, one of the basest human instincts according to Freud, into a joyless act and attempts to eliminate the orgasm.The freedom from this sort of tyranny is far more within the reach, and to some extent is already available, to the proles. The proles, superficially, have far more tangible freedom than the party members since they are able to indulge in their own activities during free time which party members are not permitted. The proles are less vigorously monitored by the Thought Police or party officials and in theory are allowed to live as they please. However, in theory, the party members are too allowed to live as they please though the reality is very different as will be discussed later.…
The glass paperweight, as a remnant of the past, reflects Winston’s attempt to reconnect with the past and rebel the government. When Winston first sees the paperweight in Mr.Charrington’s shop, he is fascinated because “The thing was doubly attractive because of its apparent uselessness, though he could guess that it must once have been intended as paperweight”(Orwell 95). According to the Party, there is no such thing as beautiful as the paperweight in the current society, which is because the beauty and uselessness of the paperweight goes against the Party’s…
Throughout the novel, Winston follows the Party’s strict rules and presents the idea of life without freedom by…
There are often times when people tend to antagonize you just because of the color of your skin or your gender. In Zora Neale Hurston’s story, “Sweat”, there is a racial dispute to be argued as well as. The character, Delia was treated like a slave by her husband, Sykes. The color of a person’s skin often was a reflection on the was people were treated.…
In 1984, three outwardly misleading characters include Winston, O’Brien, and Mr.Charrington. Since the beginning of the novel, Winston hates the authoritarian rule of the Party and constantly expresses his hatred through suppressed means. For instance, he writes obscenities against the Party in his diary, he secretly has sex with Julia as an act of rebellion, and he attempts to join an organization that opposes the Party. Yet despite all this, he acts loyally when he is being watched; for example, he alters documents wherein he praises the Party for its numerous exploits and achievements. It is fitting that by the end of the novel, he is brainwashed to love the Party: “he had won the victory over himself. He loved big brother” (Orwell, 311). This double contrast highlights the discrepancy present within reality, as in the end, his character is directly at odds with who he initially is in reality. O’Brien is an ambiguous member of the Party who Winston initially comes to trust as a result of a dream where O’Brien says “[w]e shall meet in the place where there is no darkness” (Orwell, 2). This statement itself is contradictory, as Winston initially thinks that O’Brien is referring to the joyful time when the Party is finally overthrown and people are free, but it proves to be a bright room where Winston is endlessly tortured by O’Brien. Winston believes that O’Brien shares his enmity towards the Party, but is proven wrong when O’Brien turns out to be a member of the Thought Police and his subsequent torturer. Thus, O’Brien reinforces the discrepancy between appearance and reality, as his sympathetic character proves to be a trap. Finally, Mr. Charrington, the humble owner of a small shop with a room upstairs that Winston and Julia use…
In George Orwell's "1984", Winston Smith and Julia live in Oceania, where their actions become a subversive force that the "Party" must control. Oceania, located in Europe, represents a totalitarian society in its purest form during the 1940s. Many aspects of Wilson's and Julia's daily life in Oceania are monitored and controlled by the "Party." From the telescreen to the thought police, every action is under constant surveillance. In order to rebel against Big Brother, Winston and Julia commit a series of crimes without knowing that O'Brian, a member of the Inner Party, is watching them intently. O'Brian then deceives Winston and Julia into believing that he is part of the revolutionary group called the Brotherhood. Winston and Julia's betrayal becomes inevitable after their capture because of the psychological supremacy of O'Brian and the Party. Winston's physical and mental torture and brainwashing by O'Brian and the Ministry of Truth in the name of the Party is what ultimately leads to his psychological break down.…
The paperweight signifies many different characteristics of Winston’s clandestine life. It symbolizes his insubordinate mind against the Party, but it also comes to stand for the secreted relationship between Julia and Winston. The flimsy state of the paperweight is symbolic in the fact that the entire world that Winston creates for himself and Julia can be devastated at any moment. Symbolically, at the end of the novel, the paperweight is thrown on the ground and smashed into many pieces as Winston and Julia are being captured. It also shows the idea of the room in which Winston commits quite a bit of his crime. Winston finds it appealing that nobody seems to notice that items are no longer like they used to be and that nobody seems to care. Upon finding the junk shop, with the paperweight and the old room above that supposedly didn’t have any telescreens, Winston realizes that there are still reminders around of life before the rebellion if one looks hard enough.…
Arthur Miller said, “The quality in such plays that does shake us, however, derives from the underlying fear of being displaced, the disaster inherent in being torn away from our chosen image of what and who we are in this world” (Handout). Arthur Miller is a prestigious author who created three modern tragedies, The Crucible, All My Sons, and Death of a Salesman. Each play had several characters that had a “fear of being displaced” and was afraid of “being torn away from our chosen image of what and who we are in this world”. In The Crucible, John Proctor is a characters who is afraid that his reputation would be tarnished. In addition, John Proctor believed himself to be a man of honor and integrity and with his act of adultery, his image…
Winston constantly and desperately tries to remember the past, and he sees the glass coral paperweight as a relic from the past. “He buys it as an attempt to reconnect with the past” (Shmoop Editorial Team). Because of the Party’s control, the paperweight is a remnant of the past that does not have any basis in reality anymore. Winston uses this as a concrete tangible reminder of the past, as memories are no longer reliable. “The paperweight assists the portrayal of Winstons desire to remember the true past” (Write Work…
Orwell’s novel uses an Ordinary citizen like Winston Smith in a Totalitarian environment and shows the dangers of being rebellious to this type of government. In today's worlds, some governments are adopting more totalitarian like governments with less privacy as we advance in technology governments are watching us more today than in the past. Winston Smith believed that every human should have the freedom to love whoever they pleased and be able to marry after divorce. He is the living resemblance of love, peace, and happiness. When Winston is captured and brainwashed those elements are taken out of him and hope lost again.…
In the novel 1984, the author George Orwell uses diction and symbolism to convey the message that in order for a government to obtain absolute control over its people, it must demolish the past and human spirit. When Winston revisits Mr.Charrington’s shop, he finds himself searching through endless, insignificant items from before the Revolution. Rummaging through more meaningless items, Winston comes across an exquisite and precious item. The paperweight “[had] such depth of it, and yet it was almost as transparent as air. It was as though the surface of the glass had been the arch in the sky, enclosing a tiny world with its atmosphere complete…” (80,81). Orwell uses diction to describe how delicate and beautiful the coral paperweight was, and to accentuate the sentiment Winston felt towards it; it represented another world which was enclosed inside the coral. Through his description of the coral and his diction choices such as “enclosing” and “depth”, Orwell illustrates the idea that the coral not only represents the past, but is metaphorically trapping the past beneath the surface of the glass, “enclosing” it within its “depths”, concealing it from the outside world. Similarly, Orwell uses symbolism to show that the coral is a representation of the government and the Party; while the past is inside, the government is “enclosing” itself around it, creating a barrier so that it may not escape. Not only does the coral symbolize the government, but it also represents Winston’s and Julia’s life as well. The paperweight was not mesmerizing to Winston due to the appearance of it, but “What appealed to him about it was not so much its beauty as the air it seemed to possess the belonging to an age quite different from the present one” (80,81). Although he found the coral beautiful and delicate, the real attraction was what it symbolized. Being an object from the past, the coral represents the past Winston and Julia had dedicated…
I would estimate the volatility of the total unpredictability of my real option by doing some research. There are many sites that provide information on expected income. I would find out how much a first year tax accountant would expect to earn. This would be the driving factor in the volatility because the amount I would earn at my current job could be accurately estimated at a full time rate. The present value of the future cash flows could be calculated by using the estimate given for a first year tax accountant. There wouldn’t be any fixed costs to execute the option because there isn’t a fee to pay to drop out of school. The only cost that I could incur would be the tuition money that I may lose and that will be explained in the upcoming paragraph.…