Orwell constructs Winston Smith as a protagonist that does not embody the traditional characteristics of a heroic character. He is heartfelt about his resistance‚ but Orwell creates a hero that fails. This is not the Quixotic hero‚ but rather one who is withered and weakened by the external reality. Unlike Quixote‚ the readers does not fully remember all that Winston set out to do‚ but rather recognizes in his failure likes the flawed condition of human beings. Winston is perfectly ordinary‚
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For centuries‚ people have been trying to fit everything in our world into categories. By creating a hierarchy with these categories‚ people can put their favorite things into higher categories to prove that they are better than other work in that field. Literature‚ with a definition that is different for everyone‚ is normally kept in the category of well-done written work. This means that your grocery list or books that fall short of the standard of greatness necessary are not considered to be in
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Winston and Harris have been friends since the beginning of both of their lives. They were born in the same hospital‚ lived on the same street‚ they were basically related except for the fact that they had different parents. On this day‚ they found themselves hanging out as usual at their shitty downtown New York apartment. The walls were filled with vintage rap posters from the likes of Tupac‚ Biggie Smalls and N.W.A barely hanging onto thumbtacks pressed not so carefully into the beige plaster
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technologies that has the potential to change our society like 1984. For example‚ the police now have a device that can read license plates and check if a car stolen or uninsured. Humans know that the National Security Agency can observe what we do online and Google searches. It also seems that almost every stores we would go to would always ask for our phone number and ZIP code as part of any transactions. If you have read the novel‚ 1984‚ we can see the many similar qualities that our world and Orwell’s
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Two Different Societies: Two Twisted Foundations Aldous Huxley’s Brave New World and George Orewell’s 1984 were both composed surrounding times of war in the twentieth century. The authors were alarmed by what they saw in society and began to write novels depicting the severe outcomes and possiblities of civilizaton if it continued down its path. Although the two books are very different‚ they both address many of the same issues and principles. In Brave New World Huxley creates a society
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Fiction Essay Two classic novels‚ 1984 written by George Orwell and Brave New World penned by Aldous Huxley both possess similar topics and themes. In both novels societies are striving for a utopia‚ or a perfect society. These novels also take place in societies with versions of totalitarian governments‚ which is a government that rules by coercion. Not only are the topics similar‚ but in both novels a rebellious character is the protagonist; Winston Smith from 1984 and John the Savage in Brave New
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Seright‚ Dawn English 3 AP (6) 11/5/07 Compare and Contrast The Declaration of Independence was written in 1776 and was the document that sought America’s freedom from the king of England. In 1848‚ The Declaration of Rights and Sentiments was written. Like the fight for freedom from the king‚ The Declaration of Rights and Sentiments was the document that fought for women’s freedom from men. The document used the same style‚ format‚ and structure as The Declaration of Independence‚ but different
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September 11 1984. There is only so much perpetual confinement a man can take. Often I wonder how much longer I’ll be able to stand it. The delusion that I could possibly still be an individual seized my absent mind. Porcelain white walls delineate me. No windows‚ no chance in hell to escape. I imagine O’Brien pinning the other prisoners’ arms to the wall‚ and slowly driving nails that are the length of their feet into their wrists. When he finishes there‚ I look to see him nailing their
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Compare and Contrast Essay By: Nicole Griesman For: Mrs. Nathanson Date: March 14th 2013 Topic: What does it mean to be human in the two texts 1984 and The Island? As Dalai Lama‚ a head of state and spiritual leader of Tibet once said‚ “Love and compassion are necessities‚ not luxuries. Without them humanity cannot survive.”. In The Island‚ the inhabitants are not physically human‚ and are fighting to stay alive. Meanwhile‚ in 1984‚ the inhabitants are physically human but the characteristics
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The main character in 1984 is Winston Smith. Winston is about 39 years old‚ he doesn’t know the age for sure as his parents had been gone for most of his life and there was no record of his birth. He has rough skin surrounded by light coloured hair‚ as well as a small delicate body. On the seventh floor of Victory Mansions in London (England)‚ in the superstate of Oceania‚ Winston lives alone in an apartment. Inside his apartment he has a telescreen (television). The telescreen broadcasts news and
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