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    Freedom In 1984

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    Such choices can range from what to eat and where to live. It could be anything and everything! For those in the novel 1984‚ Freedom is virtually as simple but yet complex. In the dystopia known as Oceania‚ freedom is sanctioning one to think for themselves. This is also known as thought and intelligence. In society‚ freedom plays an immense part. For the so-called dystopia in 1984‚ it is greatly banned and reinstated with security. In the end‚ if society’s rules are disobeyed‚ then prices will be

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    Doublethink In 1984

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    “Freedom is the right to tell people what they don’t want to hear‚” says George Orwell‚ writer of 1984. The Party has taken away the rights of the people to know the truth in order to maintain power. Although some would believe that the most central paradox in Orwell’s 1984 is the Party’s slogan “War is Peace. Freedom is Slavery. Ignorance is Strength‚” it is clearly the act of doublethink because it’s the Party’s form of psychological control in order to maintain power. To demonstrate‚ it is the

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    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. In this passage‚ Orwell includes two details that foreshadows a shocking end and expresses the significance of the past. The

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    1984 Essay

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    everything is monitored and even if things are done in secret there will be someone spying‚ the people who were believed to be allies will commit betrayal. In 1984 by George Orwell‚ such betrayal is expressed throughout the book. The book is set in London‚ in a totalitarian government‚ made up by an Inner Party‚ an Outer Party‚ and the Proles. Winston‚ an outer party member‚ is a 39-year old man who dislikes the Party and has many thoughts of corrupting himself and going against it‚ and throughout the

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    answer was asked and replied to three years before he wrote 1984. The audience for this letter is presumably the person who asked the question and maybe others who would be curious to see his answer (presuming they saw the question that was asked). The purpose of this letter seems quite obvious. The text is meant to be a reply to a fans question. The question and answer could have been one of the main reasons that Orwell decided to write 1984. Due to the fact that he must have thought that the question

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    Class and race are human notions. These notions can have either positive effects or leave irreparable damage. The worlds of 1984 and the modern United States are strikingly similar‚ in spite of one being realistic and one being real. In both societies‚ the world is at war‚ however‚ some of the deepest wounds are found not on the battlefield‚ but at home. In 1984‚ social class and race is used to segregate a group of people‚ which resembles what is done to underprivileged Americans in the United States

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    Wh Smith

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    in recent years. TUI Travel needs to take over a company (WH Smith Plc) which has a strong free cash flow to rebalance its financial weaknesses. Simultaneously‚ the operation principles by WH Smith are useful to TUI Plc to keep further profit growth and strong cash generation. This report aims to evaluate the necessity and feasibility for the acquisition of WH Smith by TUI travel. Content 1.0 Introduction - 5 - 2.0 SWOT Analysis of TUI Travel - 5 - 2.1 Strength - 5 - 2.2 Weakness - 6 -

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    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

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    Stalin and 1984

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    Mechanisms of Control In George Orwell’s 1984‚ the strategies used by Oceania’s "Party" to achieve total control over the population are similar to the ones emplaced by Joseph Stalin during his reign. Indeed‚ the tactics used by Oceania’s "Party" truly depicts the brutal totalitarian society of Stalin’s Russia. In making a connection between Stalin’s Russia and Big Brothers’ Oceania‚ each party implements a psychological and physical manipulation over society by controlling the information and the

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    "1984" Essay

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    1984 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.

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