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…
Readers are introduced to Winston Smith, his living situation which although called Victory Mansion is not lavish; it is a run-down apartment complex. Readers are also introduced to Big Brother, the government’s authority figure and figurehead for the Party. The telescreen always watches its Party Members, looking for traitors among them. Winston brings out a journal, out of view of the telescreen, because it is considered an act of rebellion against the Party. He writes about the films the Party makes, the dark-haired girl from work and O’Brien, someone he believes is against the Party. Winston commits thoughtcrime at the end of the chapter by writing DOWN WITH BIG BROTHER in the journal. Winston believes the Thought Police will knock at his door, but it turns out to be Mrs. Parsons, his neighbor. Winston helps her with the Parsons’ plumbing and her children accuse him of thoughtcrime. Her children are upset that they couldn’t go see the public hanging. He goes back to his apartment and hides the journal. Winston then dreams of his mother and a sinking ship that he feels responsible for. He then dreams of a Utopia free from the Party where he is with the dark-haired girl from work. He wakes up to a whistle for the “Physical Jerks”, the Party’s regulated physical exercise. Winston is yelled at from the telescreen by the exercise manager. After the “Physical Jerks” Winston goes to work at the Ministry of Truth where he updates Big Brother’s orders and Party Records so what Big Brother says is always true. He makes up a story about a fictional person, Comrade Ogilvy, as a ideal Party Man who died. Winston then meets up with Syme, another Party member who revises the Newspeak dictionary. Syme talks about the aime of Newspeak is to erase words. Winston knows the Syme will be vaporized because he is too intelligent. Parsons, Winston’s neighbor, visits Winston to get their apartment’s dues. Parsons laughs about how his…
Winston, sitting in an interrogation room, wondered to himself, “How did it come to this?” The thoughts flowing through his mind when finding out that O’Brien was secretly working for Big Brother and the Party could have ranged anywhere from abhorrence to fear. As Winston cries out for the torture to stop in Room 101, the reader cannot help but to try and feel his pain. Even though Winston knew that this day would eventually come in his life due to his pessimistic and fatalist ways of thinking, one still receives pathos when reading over that section. Also, logos is thrust into the reader’s mind when looking at newspeak and how it effectively controls the minds of most citizens of Oceania. These are only a few of many different examples of rhetoric, including ethos, logos, and pathos, sprinkled through the novel, 1984.…
Much of the more savage side of the Oceanian government is conveyed in the conversations that take place between Winston and O’Brien. O’Brien bluntly explains to Winston during a conversation meant to intimidate Winston to silence his growing questions about the purpose of Big Brother, “...always there will be the intoxication of power, constantly increasing and constantly growing subtler. Always, at every moment, there will be the thrill of victory, the sensation of trampling on an enemy who is helpless. If you want a picture of the future, imagine a boot stamping on a human face – forever" (34). Unlike the previous quotes from Foucault and Freud which present the triumph of the group over the individual, O’Brien allows for a glimpse into the mindset of those in power. Overarchingly, it demonstrates how individuals in positions of power view such power, and provides understanding as to why those individuals desperately try to keep power and the knowledge of how to wield such power away from those they…
Nineteen Eighty-Four, by George Orwell, is a great novel that allows us to view the world in a different way. Winston Smith is filled with curiosity against the Party throughout the whole book. Most of his inner-questioning occurs in Part I. Many times he conforms to what The Party tells them to do, but in his mind he questions this. George Orwell is allowing us to see we must always question whatever we think is wrong. Many times we are ignorant to what is going on around us and, like Winston, we conform to everything, but sometimes we must see the reality of things.…
When we first meet Winston, our narrator, and protagonist, he languishingly fulfills mundane duties at his job. Subsequently, 1984 is able to illuminate the gormless manner in which many of us lead our lives. Lives in which conformity equates to self-degradation and personal sacrifice. Winston leads a life of servitude in solitude. His wife never loved him and left him before the events of 1984. 1984 expands upon the notion that unity amongst the oppressed is detrimental in sustaining a system of oppression.In Winston's indoctrinating society…
6. Why was it such a terrible thing for Winston to write a diary? It indicated that he was expressing thoughts not planted in his head by the Party. What does the account in his diary tell you about this society? They are completely oblivious to human rights.…
It stands to reason that in 1984, George Orwell employs both the glass paperweight and Winston’s diary to develop Winston’s desire for past and his personal rebellion against the Party.…
Characterized by great democratic advancement, the society has taken cautions into account. The novel has been able to carefully narrate and expose the realities of cold wars in our community. The book can demonstrate a genuine meaning of suppression as being the negation of the people, and a sign of respect to the state, the party, and the leaders. Despite the milestone made in freedom of speech and equality, the society is aware that regulations, laws, and order are a cautionary measure for a peaceful coexistence. In the novel 1984, the governing party puts in place measures of ensuring that each member of the Oceania is monitored and privately watched so that the party’s agenda is not compromised. The ruling party is aware that Winston works for the Ministry of Truth and it is not ready to have its reputation shattered by anyone.…
In Oceania when you step out of line, you will be punished accordingly. That is the message George Orwell tries to get across to his reader in 1984. Since that is the notion he is trying to get his reader to understand as the author in this book, he obeys that rule as well. Orwell uses many literary devices and techniques such as symbolism, metaphors, tone, allusions, and many more… to make the reader understand what kind of society Winston is living in.…
In 1984 by George Orwell, novelist and essayist creates a dystopian novel that features his frightening vision in 1949 of the world we were soon to become. Orwell’s purpose in this passage is to convey the effect of Winston's stolen and mysterious past. Orwell uses foreshadows and symbols. He adopts a nostalgic and mysterious tone in order to hypothesize a horrific ending.…
As the main narration is based upon Winston’s thoughts of his surroundings, it is inevitable readers to disregard all the bleak concepts in his life. The opening chapter, Orwell’s immediately launches into descriptions of gloom, giving the readers the understanding of how horrible it is living under these revolutionists. Winston’s residential building, ‘Victory Mansions’, is shabby and decayed with “…electric currents…cut during the daylight hours…”; if these conditions are considered as ‘victorious’, there cannot be another more perfect reflection of bleakness than the life in Oceania . The deprivation of privacy described in ‘1984’ is also a significant factor. The peoples’ lives revolve literally around interrogating telescreens and posters of the “face…with a heavy black moustache and ruggedly handsome feature”. With all these Party concepts dominating people’s lives, there is absolutely no chance to escape from the harsh bleakness.…
The author, George Orwell, his biggest point of this novel is to remain or tell us what is the meaning to be human. In Oceania, people are being watched under thought policies and telescreens. As changing in time, people begin to obey the fact that this is the society where they live in. But they forget the most important thing --- human nature. Being a human not only flesh and bones but consist of humanity and freedom of thought. In 1984, Winston broke Oceania's law by…
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.…
In a world where almost everyone blindly follows a leader, there are bound to be problems. Where no thoughts are allowed, there is bound to be at least one that wants to rebel. In the novel, 1984, by George Orwell, all citizens of Oceania are kept under surveillance 24/7. There is no freedom in their world. However, not everyone is down with The Party. Winston and Julia take a different route, and choose to rebel against Big Brother, thinking they have escaped the watchful eyes of The Party. However, they were sadly mistaken. Big Brother sees all.Orwell’s character, Winston, is a quiet and critical thinker; Winston’s role is to overthrow The Party in order to bring the past back; however, while on his journey, Winston is caught by Big Brother.…