English 10 Semester Project Soundtrack based upon the novel 1984 by George Orwell Track #1 Song: Satellite Artist: Guster Album: Ganging Up On the Sun Shining like a work of art Hanging on a wall of stars Are you what I think you are? You’re my satellite You’re riding with me tonight Passenger side‚ lighting the sky Always the first star that I find You’re my satellite Elevator to the moon Whistling our favorite tune Trying to
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Dystopian America Shaina Spears St Georges Technical High School Abstract The dystopian novel‚ 1984 by George Orwell gives readers an insight into a frightening society‚ where authority figures are constantly watching you‚ waiting for you to make a mistake‚ and subsequently murdering you. My fear is that his predictions of future society will come true in America. The government is invading our privacy rights by controlling our cell phones unknowingly‚ through the National
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Orwell’s 1984 Eleven years prior to the beginning of the action in 1984‚ Winston Smith accidentally comes across a photograph of three men: Jones‚ Aronson‚ and Rutherford. The "party" had contrived a plot to prove the three guilty of treason. The picture‚ however‚ because of its true location and date in relation to the party’s false scenario‚ shows the men’s innocence. The picture provides Orwell’s protagonist‚ Winston Smith‚ with "concrete‚ unmistakable evidence of falsification" of the past
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novel 1984 Since its release‚ the novel 1984 by George Orwell has come under the spotlight as a predictive literary work‚ providing a scarily accurate commentary on society and the ways that governments rule over the public. This essay will analyze the novel and the metaphors that Orwell uses to compare the characters and concepts presented in the book with the real-world as experienced by the author himself‚ and many others in society. Through extremely descriptive‚ immersive writing‚ Orwell manages
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Critique “The Handmaid’s Tale‚” written by Margaret Atwood is a fictional book that takes place in the near future when all of women’s rights were taken away. The book is from the point of view of a girl who just lost her family‚ all her money‚ her possessions and is later taken away to be a handmaid. This all took place because of the overthrow of the government. As a handmaid it is her duty to obey all new laws and to reproduce children for the “higher class” or she will face the wall (be hung)
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world of 1984. The novel 1984 written by George Orwell is about a totalitarian government who oppresses its people and controls all aspects of their lives. The government is symbolized by Big Brother‚ people are monitored their entire day for flaws in their thinking towards Big Brother. I believe that privacy of American citizens is being violated and that people should not give up aspects of their personal privacy for greater good of society. The book 1984 was written by Orwell to caution
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The Terrorist Surveillance Program : Orwell’s 1984 Is Alive Where the National Security Agency (NSA) stands in our world has often been compared to the state of surveillance in the novel 1984 by George Orwell. Privacy in our world and in the novel’s world is something that makes you wonder if privacy no longer exists. In our society the NSA always spies on us through are devices with people having no clue that they are invading there privacy. In Oceania‚ privacy is something that no longer exists
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Margaret Atwood’s The Handmaid’s Tale takes place in a post Cold War society plagued by infertility. Atwood presents the reader with “The Republic of Gilead”‚ the Christian theocracy that overthrew the United States government. Narrated by a woman renamed Offred‚ the reader gets an idea of a future in which women are no longer women‚ but are solely needed for reproduction. Atwood uses a system of vocabulary established under the Republic of Gilead in order to manipulate and dehumanize women and
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exposed. It is these violations that a patriarchal‚ authoritarian theocracy is created in the nation-state of Gilead. Oppression‚ status‚ and fear run rampant through the nation-state. Obedience is tantamount for the survival of women and the regime. Atwood exposes how building a utopia leads to a dystopia for those that are considered as being an “other.” The destruction of past decades inflicted on the earth and society brought a rebirth of Puritan values. Men took over everything and women were assigned
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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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