o The weight or mass of an element is equal to the number of protons and number of neutrons…
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.…
The comic Kingdom Come depicts dystopia through the violent acts committed by the civilians. Dystopia is defined as a society characterized by human misery as squalor, oppression, disease and overcrowding lead to violence and lack of trust. The 1949 novel Nineteen Eighty-Four by George Orwell, “...has become famous for its portrayal of pervasive government surveillance and control, and government's increasing encroachment on the rights of the individual” (Nineteen Eighty Four e.p. 1). In a totalitarian government, civilians are not allowed to have their own thoughts and must follow the government’s rules and ways of thinking. For example, the novel follows the main character, Winston Smith, as he falls in love “illegally” and is captured by the…
Orwell, George. "The Spike." Fifty Essays by George Orwell. Project Gutenberg of Australia, Aug. 2003. Web.…
In Nineteen-Eighty four, the protagonist begins a diary and finds that he hates the party that rules and watches over him. With that being said Winston begins to do things to rebel from Big Brother. Towards the middle of the book, Winston meets and falls in love with Julia. Winston and Julia believe that they are sneaking around behind Big Brothers back undetected. However we find out later that they have been betrayed and turned in. After being beaten, they separate the two and drag them to the Ministry of Love. This incident affects both Julia and Winston, they have to be separated and tortured to wipe away any rebelling thoughts about Big Brother. Once they have been captured we begin to wonder if they will crack under the pressure and accept…
Orwell uses Winston as the main character and also as a main weapon against the party. Not only does Winston lead the story he also is a symbol for rebellion. The novel begins with the setting being described as a “bright cold day” (Orwell 1) with Winston attempting to “escape the vile wind” (Orwell 1) and the “gritty dust” (Orwell 1). Shortly after this the tone is depressing and darker as it begins to explain Winston’s home life where he walks up 7 flights on his varicose ulcer that was on his right ankle. In the first of many instances the mood is usually determined by the weather, as if the weather foreshadows the mood. This begins to describe the rebellion as well as Winston by showing that there is no rebellion and what is there is weak like Winston.…
George Orwell writes his novel Nineteen Eighty-Four not as a story of fiction but as a warning about the dangers of totalitarian control. The concepts of free enterprise and individual freedom no longer exist in 1984, all of the power is split into three groups Eastasia, Eurasia, and Oceania. In his novel, Nineteen Eighty-Four, George Orwell uses certain literary devices, introduces new linguistic concepts and uses propaganda techniques to suppress freedom, controlling the people and forming a totalitarian society. Orwell introduces two new linguistic concepts in 1984; newspeak, and doublespeak. Newspeak is used by the Party to reduce and limit thought, and simplify the english language to the bare minimum. Doublespeak, on the other hand, which is commonly used by Party members to distort the actually meaning of words, and use the words against those who do not understand what they mean. George Orwell uses the propaganda tactics of “plain folks,” as well as the use of the Big Brother posters to achieve the idea of suppressing freedom. By utilizing propaganda techniques, introducing new language concepts and using literary devices, Orwell successfully warns us about the potential dangers of totalitarian control in our society today.…
name of the leader of Oceania, "Big Brother." The concept of a big brother is…
1984 begins on a cold April day, the totalitarian superpower during World War II Europe. We are introduced to Winston, which is depressed and oppressed, and starts a journal on his rebellious thoughts against the Party. On which, if it’s discovered he will be executed. Winston becomes curious about Julia, and is in paranoia of her being a member of the Thought Police, but that changed when she slips him a note reading “I love you”.…
Significant changes of a man’s character are evident in where something’s wrong with the world and the society in where he lives. In the novel, “1984”, written by George Orwell writes a book which creates an outlook of an ordinary man named Winston Smith, the central character of “1984”. Winston is a kind of innocent in a world has gone wrong, and it is through him that the reader attempts to understand and feel the mix challenges of a man’s inner struggle to follow the rules in a world in which realistic optimism is impossible. Through this ordinary middle –aged man’s journey to change the world around him, the audience will see Winston’s failing acts and efforts throughout the course of the novel. Orwell illustrates a tragic hero whose passive rebellion character is withered and weakened by his own destructive downfall; struggles against his external reality and his failing efforts to rise above.…
Steven Spielberg, who was at the beginning of his career, directed jaws. On June 20th, 1975, Steven Spielberg near the beginning of his career released the soon-to-be summer blockbuster. (Choi and “The Making of Jaws”). Steven Spielberg started his career on a television drama entitled “Eyes”. Though because of his young age and inexperience, actors would not listen and he had little respect from the cast. This led Spielberg to quit the show (Gottfried 34-36). Short after this in 1971, the producers approached the young director to create a television movie from a short story called Duel, a story about a truck driver pursuing an innocent businessman. Spielberg, desperate to launch his career, filmed an entire two-and-a-half hours…
Winston Smith, the protagonist and main character in George Orwell's novel 1984. Smith is a very important aspect of Orwell’s novel, because it is through his point of view that we see the world he is living in. Reading the story through Smith’s point of view helps better understand why Smith behaves the way he does. To better understand Smith one must understand smith’s role. Smith is minor member of the ruling Party in near-future London, Winston Smith is a thin, frail, contemplative, intellectual, and fatalistic thirty-nine-year-old.…
One of the fundamental propositions provided by Orwell’s classic 1984 is the convoluted relationship between “oppression” and “repression”. His literary devices go into explicit detail in describing how such despotism affects the human apparatus, causing an organized chaos amongst society. Winston Smith is used as a living transition to display the influence of this societal pressure and how it’s usage of fear for controlling a population will ultimately veer back and result in the untimely disruption of an illusion of peace. Unlike the majority of his peers, Winston has become rather apprehensive towards his surroundings. Through his window, Winston has clear view of the four governing branches of the party.…
Which social structure do you think has been significant in Australia in the last twelve months and which social structure do you think will be significant in the next twelve months? Has its importance been consistent historically? – Gender…
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…