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    In 1984‚ George Orwell‚ English novelist‚ delivers a dystopian fiction novel about the future possible world of 1984. Orwell creates the character‚ Winston Smith‚ the protagonist of the novel. Winston Smith is solely against the party and is curious as to where his rebellion against the party will lead him. While still attending hate week‚ working for the party‚ and being under surveillance 24/7‚ Smith attempts to figure out his way to the Brotherhood. Along with Smith’s hate for the party‚ Orwell

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    a world in which occupants were monitored at all times. Well‚ in George Orwell’s 1984‚ the citizens in Oceania are scrutinized at all hours of the day. In 1984‚ Winston Smith starts a journal to express his negative thoughts about the Party and Big Brother even though he can be punished by death if caught. Soon after starting his journal‚ Winston meets Julia‚ another unorthodox person like Winston. After a few gatherings with Julia‚ Winston falls in love with her. Then O’Brien invites Winston and

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    1984 Political Language

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    Relationship between Language‚ Politics‚ and the Truth English 12 Steven Hamel “Political language [...] is designed to make lies sound truthful and murder respectable‚ and to give an appearance of solidity to pure wind.” In George Orwell’s novel‚ 1984 and his essay “Politics and the English Language” there is a clear connection between politics‚ language‚ and expressing the truth. Politics aims to control people by altering and distorting language. George Orwell’s prescient view of society

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    Reality Tv

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    their own life. - “real life” television is filmed with out stoppage time‚ and then edited to catch the viewers eye - certifiable global pop-culture phenomenon - Reality TV comes is all different forms now from daily life of real people such as Big Brother and Jersey Shore‚ sports shows‚ business shows like undercover boss and dirtiest jobs‚ talent shows such as American Idol and Dancing with the stars‚ family shows John and Kate plus 8‚ and motivational shows like biggest loser and survivor. - Taking

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    Completed Research

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    pHabeebah Ali Unit 2: communication skills for creative media production Unit 32: Designing idents for tv Task 1: Research portfolio History of channel 4 http://www2.tv-ark.org.uk/channel4/index.html Channel Four started on November 2nd‚ 1982 at 4.40pm with a preview of it’s programmes followed by the first edition of Countdown‚ still running now and the programme that made Richard Whiteley a household name. The channel‚ at the time a wholly owned subsidiary of the IBA‚ would aim to increase programming

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    Totalitarianism as explained by Merriam Webster dictionary is a political centralized system ran by an autocratic authority in which its citizens are subject to total and absolute state of authority. The system has no recognition of limits to its authority to regulate every aspect of citizen’s public and personal life (Merriam-Webster Dictionary‚ 2015). After reading the book 1984 written by George Orwell‚ I truly believe that it is definitely possible for a government to control the minds of

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    George Orwell’s 1984 dystopian exemplary work. Although written in the 1940s‚ in 1984‚ it is the elimination of counter-revolutionaries during the Chinese Cultural Revolution and the Soviet Union during a vivid portrayal. After the Second World War Ⅱ dystopian entered‚ when the world is in for future losses. While the world has been cleared of fascism‚ communism and the cult of personality dictatorship appears to take its place. Ectopic is characterized by the development of individual freedom and

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    Reality Shows

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    Reality TV is the new mantra of television producers and channel executives. It is the means to increase TRP ratings and the end is always to outdo the other channels and the ‘similar-but-tweaked-here-and-there’ shows churned out by the competition. So fierce is the competition in this segment that every channel boasts of at least two to three reality shows. Some of them are inherited legally from abroad‚ (mostly and always from the USA – the Godmother of reality television) or some are cheap copies

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    1984 Symbolism Analysis

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    Orwell uses many forms of symbolism in his novel 1984. Just a few of these symbols are the rats that Winston is afraid of‚ the diary where he keeps all his thoughts and feelings‚ and the gin that both Winston and other public figures turn to help control their emotions. Another notable symbol is the telescreen‚ which evokes feelings of dictatorship over the population‚ as they are constantly being watched for any signs of rebellion. Orwell’s symbols all point to the same general idea: the weakening

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    occasionally” (Orwell 298). The memories of a rebellion against the Party come across as irrelevant to Winston‚ when before‚ it is all he thought about. At the Chestnut Tree Café‚ Winston acknowledges that “he had won the victory over himself. He loved Big Brother” (Orwell 298). In other words‚ Winston accepts the ways and the rules of the party‚ and decides to continue on with his life‚ disremembering all of his past. Winston cannot be defined as a hero because of how he chooses to go along with the totalitarian

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