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    Animal Farm And 1984

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    set in a society with actual people. However‚ they still express how totalitarian governments are faulty systems with horrible leaders. Animal Farm and 1984 share a mutual theme‚ Orwell ’s fear of totalitarian governments‚ but they also share differences of characters‚ settings‚ and sub-themes. The main antagonists in Animal Farm and 1984‚ Napoleon and Big Brother‚ are comparable in the way that they are developed. The have similar mannerisms‚ ways of enforcing rules‚ and ways of controlling

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    1984 Journal Entry

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    Journal entry #1 The world in which Winston Smith lives in is very frightening. It is very unlikely that people from the world we live in would survive for long living in it. I think it is an awful time to be alive because you have no freedom at all. Winston is in the worst possible position‚ he is in the Outer Party. He is being monitored at all times and he can only cooperate. It seems that the proles and the Inner Party are much better off. I think that this is true because nobody cares about

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    1984 Expository Essay

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    1984 Expository Essay The Book 1984 was written by George Orwell shortly after W.W.II. The book really shows us what would happen if the government gets too powerful. The world of 1984 is so organize that it has many high technologies to keep people on line or more importantly is to control. However‚ our world is much more different‚ we have our own individualism‚ freedom‚ and power. First of all‚ our world is much more different than the world of 1984‚ because we have our own individualism.

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    1984 Warning Signs

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    The Warning Signs of 1984 Eric Arthur Blair‚ also known as George Orwell‚ made one of the more brilliant and questionable books of the 20th century. Orwell lived through a time of new political movements and mass destruction of World War II. Communism‚ fascism‚ and the idea of a totalitarian government concerned Orwell‚ and also had a big influence on his novel 1984. In this novel‚ Orwell tries to show the readers what the dangers of a Totalitarian government really are‚ attempting to prevent it

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    reality made for them. 1984 by George Orwell is a story of Winston Smith’s struggle against a totalitarian government that controls the ideas and thoughts of its citizens. In the mythical setting of Oceania‚ the Party is the ruling‚ and Big Brother is the fictitious leader that controls all the thoughts and actions of human life. The people’s rebellious thoughts and actions are most likely suppressed‚ but that can only go so far for a totalitarian government. In the novel 1984‚ Oceania is controlled

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    The Crucible / 1984 Throughout history millions of people have found themselves to be guilty for crimes they did not commit ‚ with little to no evidence‚ and suffered the consequences of being scorned‚ arrested‚ and tortured ‚ also known as McCarthyism. One can clearly see that McCarthyism is evident in both the play “The Crucible” and the novel 1984 by George Orwell‚ although conveyed a bit differently‚ one can also find similarities between The Crucible and 1984 regarding McCarthyism

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    Sahil Aggarwal Williams IB English SL The Veracity of Paradoxical Slogans in 1984 The definition of a paradox is‚ “A statement that on the surface seems a contradiction‚ but that actually contains some truth.” In George Orwell’s‚ 1984‚ the use of paradoxes is exemplified in an attempt to allow the reader to understand the true intentions of a totalitarian government. By using war as a method of keeping peace in the society or even going so far as to further the degree of ignorance to greaten the

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    1984 Censorship Essay

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    Censorship of media and ideas is a common occurrence in Oceania‚ the setting of the story 1984‚ by George Orwell. Censorship is the suppression of ideas or images from media that are deemed inappropriate‚ politically unacceptable‚ or a threat to security. The totalitarian power in 1984‚ Big Brother‚ exercises censorship in many different ways to censor both media and even mental thoughts. Government censorship is dangerous because it limits individuals ability to think freely‚ can create an unfair

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    The Ironies of Orwell’s 1984 The novel 1984‚ by George Orwell‚ has many examples of irony throughout it. The two major types of irony: verbal irony and situation irony‚ are demonstrated again and again in this novel. In the following essay I will discuss these types of ironies and give examples of each from the book. The first type of irony is verbal irony‚ in which a person says or does something one way‚ but the true meaning is the opposite. One of the first example of this irony is discovered

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    totalitarianism by showing government infringement on the rights of the people in Oceania.“The aim of the Party was not merely to prevent men and women from forming loyalties… Its real‚ undeclared purpose was to remove all pleasure from the sexual act.”(1984‚ pg.83). The party is trying to destroy any institution of loyalty outside of the party. Marriage‚ in the eyes of Big Brother‚ is no longer meant as a catalyst for love. Rather‚ it serves only to create children. “The telescreen received and transmitted

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