The Party changes and rewrites to past to conform to what they say, Winston is among the people who rewrites the past documents and books.…
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…
Within the novel 1984 lie multiple characters, some more complex than others, but one character truly stands out above the rest, Julia. Julia is quite young and mostly obeys the Party’s rules, she usually defies the little rules but claims to be breaking the “big” ones. Julia makes it clear that she hates the Party, yet does not want them to be eradicated? Surely Julia keeps heads spinning, this is certainly true in Winston's case. Winston is quite special himself, at the beginning of 1984, the feelings he felt towards Julia were more or less violent.…
1.Compare and contrast Julia and Winston. How does each rebel against the Party, and are these rebellions at all effective?…
Back in 1984 there were many events going on like The Cold War, and many economic problems going on. The book 1984 had 3 slogans that were used a lot throughout the book War is Peace, Freedom is Slavery, and Ignorance is Strength. But, the main point that I will be talking about is Freedom of Slavery because it basically is if people are free to do things and express ideas contrary to party doctrine, everybody is made weak. They are slaves to their own ideas and not strong under one idea for the party. The three main points I will be talking about is when Winston and Julia were both in the cell, room 101 and when Winston and Julia are having to split apart when talking because of the Thought Police.…
During the whole book Winston and Julia were against the party and they would rebel. Winston hides from the telescreen and writes. He writes about the party and things that happened that he remembers (not actually remembers but gets flashbacks). Julia on the other hand has sexual intercourse with many men and she steals from the party. Both of them are serious crimes during the entire book, and it's kind of like today except you don't get punished as bad. People just tend to look at you bad and call you things like if a boy has sexual intercourse with many women then he's a player and if a girl does it she is a hoe. Stealing on the other hand can lead to serious punishment like going to jail for a couple of years but it's not much to die for…
The film 1984 based on the book by George Orwell, describes a totalitarian and dystopian regime, complete with too many laws and rules, and a government who surveil your every move. The people live in fear and ignorance, but do not know any better. Do we live in a dystopian society today? What is similar with 1984 and what is not? Is there a government in the world that is more similar than others?…
The reason for the Party not approving sex was because they felt the need to always have control over everyone. They believed that the sole purpose of sex was to create children in order to help within society. The Party gave children the order to report their parent's instances of Thoughtcrime so that families will not have the ability to threaten their power. Winston enjoyed sex, which is why he broke apart from his anti-sex former wife, Katherine. This habit, however, led Winston to engage in acts with Julia, a prostitute.…
Julia offers Winston something outside of this. She gives him physical and emotional comfort, contrasting what the Party offers. However, their beliefs in the opposition to the Party differ greatly, Winston rebels in hope that future generations will be free of the Party. Julia, being younger has no memories of a time before the Party and therefore can't imagine a time without them in control, she rebels more for simply the sake of doing so. Julia believes that the only way of opposing the party is with secret acts of disobedience or at the most isolated acts of violence because she doesn't believe that anyone or anything can defeat…
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…
Rebellion can be a versatile and fluid concept, taking the form of the resentful or the oppressed. 1984 explores rebellion for the purpose of Orwell’s anti-despotic political statement. His depiction of a future totalitarian government is a frightening vision, utilizing the protagonist as a quasi-hero. Textually comparative to other strong rebellious character depictions of the hero that sacrifices…
Throughout Winston’s explanation of his personality, Syme is someone that can be seen as different, and because of that, the government exterminates him. The same happens in our society today, as outcasts are “socially vaporized” through bullying and suicide. Soon after Syme is introduced as a character, Winston states his belief that he will be vaporized saying, “Syme will be vaporized. He is too intelligent. He sees too clearly and speaks too plainly. The Party does not like such people. One day he will disappear” (53).…
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.…
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 addition, the Party will not fall because the member of the Inner Party deliberately acts as spies to catch those who go against everything the Party represents. O’Brien is a great example of how the Party manipulates people so it does not fall. He is a spy, although Winston is not aware of this. O’Brien gives Winston “signals” that are meant to be interpreted as O’Brien is against the Party. He continues this charade with the fact that he is part of a secret society that goes against the Party called the Brotherhood.…