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    1984 literary theories

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    George Orwell’s 1984 was an incredible book that displayed a multitude of literary theories that would require looking at the novel from different perspectives. The novel contains subtext that is influenced by the author’s personal experience‚ and the time in which he resided. Winston Smith represents Archetypal literary theory Orwell was raised in England‚ even thought he was born in India‚ so smith was a common name‚ thus implying that Winston Smith was just a common man. The common man has always

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    1984 passage analysis

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    George Orwell in his dystopian novel 1984 manifestly reveals the oppressive nature of society‚ and Winston’s attitude toward it. He uses both the setting of life and Winston’s general thoughts about that era as a tool to express the true nature of society‚ and to show that it hasn’t always been that way‚ and that it is not the natural order of things. The society that Orwell describes in this passage is portrayed as a dark‚ crowded and gruesome place. He quotes‚ “A low ceilinged‚ crowded room‚

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    1984 By George Orwell

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    The media gains a broad influence in both George Orwell’s novel 1984 and in current society through similar methods. The most powerful ways to control a society are fear and direction of anger. Whether it is fear of attack‚ death‚ or torture‚ the vast majority will rally behind a leader promising safety or revenge. In 1984‚ the daily Hate spurs the people into screaming fits of rage against Emmanuel Goldstein‚ the ultimate enemy of Oceania. Orwell writes‚ “...the sight or even the thought of Goldstein

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    1984 Dialectical Journal

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    Journal 1: 1984 What has struck your interest so far in the novel? Why? 1984 is fascinating‚ because it was written to take place in the future‚ but the future has since become the past. The year 1984 has come and gone‚ and‚ fortunately‚ we do not live in the world envisioned by George Orwell. Nevertheless‚ some of the parallels between the world presented in the novel and the present day are eerie. Orwell seems to have imagined some things very similar to the modern day. One of the smaller details

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    1984 Metropolis Essay

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    The quote “The object of power is power” is heavily supported by George Orwell’s 1949 novel ‘1984’ and Fritz Lang’s 1927 film ‘Metropolis’ through their intertextual connections and shared perspectives. Both texts were composed around the context of pre and post World War 2 which is clearly evident through their settings‚ characterisation‚ themes and ideas. Through Orwell’s and Fritz’s use of dystopic societies‚ empowerment of women and detrimental dictatorship rule it is blatant that George Orwell’s

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    1984 Free Will Essay

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    Thomas Jefferson once said “Government big enough to supply everything you need is big enough to take everything you have … The course of history shows that as a government grows‚ liberty decreases.” In his novel 1984‚ George Orwell demonstrates that even though government control seems like a better way of life‚ free will ultimately proves to be the better path. He proves that free will is better in the novel through the constant government surveillance‚ how even the slightest demonstration of free

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    1984” by George Orwell is a classic‚ beautifully written novel. Throughout‚ Orwell skilfully uses a wide range of techniques to help convey his themes and very strong messages. One of the main messages he projects heavily throughout the novel is a warning against the dangers of a totalitarian society which Winston Smith‚ the main character‚ is not at all in harmony with. The novel follows his tragic life in one of these brutal societies. The novel is set in a futuristic past. It is around 1948

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    1984 Social Standards

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    keep an entire society in poverty in order to benefit others? Social classes have always put others beneath more fortunate people. Can a person seem inferior due to their social class? In George Orwell’s‚ 1984‚ a person’s placement in the Party effects what social standards they will live with. 1984 is Orwell’s warning to what will happen if society continues to apply social standards to people. The Inner Party‚ the highest social class‚ is a direct line to the will of the omnipotent Big Brother.

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    1984 by George Orwell

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    Breyer asked‚ "If you win this case‚ then there is nothing to prevent the police or the government from monitoring 24 hours a day the public movement of every citizen of the United States. So if you win‚ you suddenly produce what sounds like 1984...."[68] In 1984‚ the book was made into a movie. In 2006‚ the movie version of V for Vendetta was released‚ which has many of the same running themes and principles.[69][70] In Nineteen Eighty-Four‚ John Hurt acts out the central character of Winston Smith

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    “A place where disorder becomes harmony.” – Elder Chief‚ The Giver.  A dystopia can be defined as a futuristic‚ exaggerated‚ and highly controlled world  with the illusion  of  perfection.  1984‚ written in  1948  by George Orwell‚ is  a futuristic  society novel about a fictional leader with unthinkable amounts control and power over a  systematic society‚ which is controlled with strict regulations. The short story “Harrison  Bergeson”  is  a  modern  set  society  where  the  people  are  made 

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