Dally Winston is meaner, colder and tougher member of the greasers. Ponyboy describes him as ‘towheaded and shifty-eyed, Dally was anything but handsome. Yet in his hard face there was character, pride, and a savage defiance of the world.’…
Throughout the entire novel, the Party brainwashes the population through several immoral acts to ensure their dominance and control over Oceania. By literally controlling people and their minds, the Party is able to limit the amount of rebellion in Oceania. For example, because the language Newspeak does not have words such as rebel or go against, citizens cannot speak of it since there is no language for it. This ensures that the Party always remains in control and there is no genuine threat of overthrowing Big Brother. O’Brien’s deceptions allow the few rebels to be easily spotted and captured without influencing the rest of the population. O’Brien plays a major role in controlling thoughts by torturing Winston in the ending. By making his mind believe something he know is wrong, O’Brien has complete control over Winston’s thoughts and…
After meeting with O’Brien, someone who Winston believes is also against the party, Winston is overcome with excitement. He believes he’s finally on his way to meet…
He begins to feel paranoid. At this point, WInston doesn’t back out. He keeps breaking the law when he meets Julia. They both give in and fall in love with each other. They both meet O'brian, which leads them to want to join Brotherhood to overcome Big Brother.…
This quote leads Winston to believe that O’Brien is on the same page as him. It’s as if O’Brien knew what to say to allow Winston to open up and fall into the trap. Winston had conjured up this conversation off of what he mistakenly took for “two minds think alike”. This quote serves to show how wrong Winston had been in his interpretation. O’Brien was actually very supporting of “The Party” and would eventually be a part of the downfall that Winston faces. Another reason why I chose this quote is because of the words that Winston places in O’Brien’s message because he couldn’t be farther away from being on his side. O’Brien is the one who ultimately serves to torture Winston after he has been brought in.…
Finally, Julian and his mother’s collective pride results in their collective suffering. From the beginning, O’Connor characterizes Julian’s opinion towards his mother with disdain. He feels as though “everything that [gives] her pleasure [is] small and depresse[s] him.” He reveals his prideful nature through the pointed thought, believing that his worldly mindset has outgrown the small and closed-minded society that his mother represents. In addition, Julian describes his mother’s repetitive rant about the implications of integration as a “a train on an open track” of which he knows “every stop, every junction, every swamp… and the exact point at which her conclusion roil[s] majestically into the station.” The simile hints at his aforementioned distaste for his mother’s opinions,…
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…
At the beginning of the book Winston was a thought criminal and nothing more and he later evolves into a full-fledged rebel, joining the “infamous” Brotherhood. Winston was an extremely annoying character from the very start. His decisions and actions were extremely irrational and I was not able to connect with his character throughout the novel. Winston had accepted that he would die to the hands of the Party as soon as he thought about writing in his diary. As readers we can only assume that Winston felt differently about Big Brother than most of the Party members, and this made him feel alone and vulnerable. This causes him to trust just about anyone who does not literally tell him they are part of the Thought Police. He feels he can trust O’Brien without any proof, he trusts Julia’s note to him and meets up with her knowing full well that she could be a spy for the Thought Police and finally he trusts Mr. Charrington because his old age makes him appear fragile and helpless. Winston was an annoying character because he never hoped to accomplish anything. There was no goal in his mind, and no intention of creating one either.…
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…
In the beginning Winston goes against the law and secretly buys a journal to write in, even though if he is caught he will be taken away forever. He would have to face Big Brother, but Winston was willing to take the chance. Many times he reads throughout the novel “ War is Peace, Freedom is Slavery, Ignorance is Strength”. Which is the official saying of the Party. While attempting to write in the journal Winston found himself only being able to write “Down with Big Brother” repeatedly. He always found himself confused on what to do but always believed that he would never conform into one of them!…
Winston often faces a dilemma about who he pledges his allegiance to. His rebellious nature tells him to believe in Goldstein and to love him. On the other hand, Winston also finds it hard to rebel due to the power of the Party. This quote exemplifies this conflict inside of Winston. During the two-minute hate, Winston joins the crowd in booing at the screen but he also finds himself thinking about how Goldstein isn’t the bad guy in this society. This shows one side of Winston, the rebellious “you can’t control me” Winston. The other side of Winston is seen when his, “secret loathing of Big Brother turned into adoration.” This side of Winston admires the Party and Big Brother because of the amount of power they wield. Though the party is not…
In his novel 1984, George Orwell selects an act of betrayal to depict the most important part of the novel, showing the fall of Winston, the main character. Throughout the novel, Winston is ready to change the society’s rules and ideas but after one of the characters betrayed him, his role changed completely because his life turned around. This character was O’Brien and if it wasn’t for his acts, the novel would’ve had another path.From the beginning of the novel, Winston felt that he had a special connection with O’Brien, thinking that he might be feeling the same way as he did towards the society they were living in. Winston was constantly looking to have an encounter with him, hoping to make a revolution against Big Brother. Finally having…
This chapter also serves to introduce the fact that Syme has been vaporized, enabling O'Brien to reference him in the next chapter and thus key Winston in to O'Brien's possible unorthodoxy. Syme's disappearance also serves as the basis of the relationship between Winston and O'Brien. Note that Winston predicted Syme's disappearance earlier in the novel; furthermore, this meeting between Winston and O'Brien had been foreshadowed in Chapter 1, when Winston relates the eye contact made between him and…
In the novel Nineteen Eighty-four, O’Brien successfully demonstrates the themes of hope and betrayal. As O’Brien’s character is introduced to the reader, one can note he is idealized by Winston. To Winston, O’Brien is an individual that is against Big Brother’s propaganda. The main character feels a sense of satisfaction when O’Brien is present. Winston tells the audience, he has, “a secretly-held belief- or perhaps not even a belief, merely a hope—that O’Brien’s political orthodoxy was not perfect” (Orwell, 13). Winston always hopes that O’Brien will side with him and help him find out history. Thinking O’Brien had the same thoughts as him, allowed Winston to be more confident and comfortable with himself. Winston believes O’Brien can help him achieve the freedom he wants. O’Brien’s character also portrays the theme of betrayal; all the hope Winston had in O’Brien quickly changes into deceit as he realizes, O’Brien is the individual who tortures him to love Big Brother. First, O’Brien pretends to be a part of the Brotherhood. He inducts Winston into the group, but does it to frame him for the ultimate crime. While in the jail cell Winston hears, “the same voice that had said to him, ‘we shall meet in the place where there is no darkness,’ in a dream seven years ago” (256). Throughout the book, the reader is told O’Brien says this in Winston’s dream earlier. To…
From the beginning of the novel rebellion had always been a part of Winston, but as time went on rebellion from the powerful Big Brother consumed him. After his hysteric outburst on paper on writing “DOWN WITH BIG BROTHER”, Winston reveals that, “He had committed- would still have committed, even if he had never set pen on paper- the essential crime. Thought crime..." This is the first time Winston allows his feeling to surface through the suppression of the party. Within him there is sheer hatred for Big Brother, enough to sporadically scream his demise through pen and paper. More importantly, he knew he committed a crime and that it was inevitable. Though he knows that what he has done cannot be changed he accepts its inevitability. Rebellion was rooted in the deepest part of his mind as Thoughtcrime and it was inescapable.…