"Fear in 1984" Essays and Research Papers

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    A Description Of Fear

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    Alex N EIV AP p.1 The worst kind of fear is the fear of the unknown. The fear of not knowing. When you turn around‚ but there is nothing there. When you feel like you are being watched‚ but there’s nothing there. When you hear your name called out‚ but you are alone. That is the essence of fear. There are creatures‚ monsters‚ that feed off this fear. They incite doubt to feed‚ worry to drink‚ and fear to grow. Monsters live off of fear‚ like a parasite feeding‚ it eats and eats taking away hope

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    Propaganda in 1984

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    Crystal Robles Dr. Paliwoda English 101 4 December 2012 In Oceania‚ rumors‚ myths‚ ideas and false information controls the minds of the citizens. The Party uses propaganda as a powerful weapon against the citizens. There are many types of propaganda used. Propaganda is brainwash. The citizens of Oceania are brainwashed to think that the Party is really there to help them‚ to make them happy. “WAR IS PEACE. FREEDOM IS SLAVERY. IGNORANCE IS STRENGTH.” and “Big Brother is Watching You” are examples

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    Pleasure In 1984

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    Life itself would be dull and pointless if no pleasures existed. A government can manipulate the population’s minds if they have no reason to live. Their minds and actions would be effortlessly controlled by propaganda and brute force. In the novel 1984‚ the Party has reduced the pleasure the population of Oceania can have to basically nothing. The government limiting the people in what they can or cannot do is unjust and inhumane. Not much in life can the citizens enjoy except for the propaganda

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    On the Fear of Death

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    The Fear Of Death" The title "On The Fear Of Death‚" caught my eye as I was skimming the text for a story. After some thought‚ I concluded that the word "death" means more to me than most of my peers. I grew up as the daughter of a hard working man‚ one with an uncommon occupation. My father is a mortician. "On The Fear Of Death" intrigued me because many adopt such a negative view of death. Kubler-Ross takes the concept of death and embraces it‚ perhaps allowing her to ease her own fear of mortality

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    Analysis of 1984

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    Analysis of 1984 In 1949‚ an Englishman named Eric Blair published the novel 1984. Under the pseudonym‚ George Orwell‚ this author became one of the most respected and notable political writers for his time. 1984 was Orwell’s prophetic vision of the world to come. This creation of "Negative Utopia" was thoroughly convincing through Orwell’s use of setting and characterization. The theme conveyed by Orwell is that no matter how strong an individual a communist society would destroy any hope

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    Dehumanization In 1984

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    Brother” as the all-controlling entity in George Orwell’s 1984 is the premise for the role truth plays throughout the novel. Truth is functioned against society for the benefit of the government. Similarly‚ Tennessee Williams creates a uniquely different environment for his characters in The Glass Menagerie while maintaining the same function of truth as a source of distortion and control. Collectively‚ the themes of dehumanization in 1984 and distortion of memory in The Glass Menagerie relate to

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    Fear Is A Valve

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    psychopath are what we initially picture when we think of “Monster”. Fear is the first emotion that comes to us. We think of them as the furthest thing from human possible‚ something that doesn’t relate to us. Yet‚ we created them from our wildest thoughts. To us a “Monster” is a valve that lets out the dark within us‚ a mask that allows to hide behind while we show our true intentions‚ and a menace portrayed from what we fear in real life. A “Monster” is a valve because it lets us release the

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    Innate Fear

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    From where do our innate fears come from? EVOLUTION: Innate Fears: Innate fears are fears we have from birth When geese are hatched in a hatchery they are set aside in a cage and have a cardboard cutout of a goose flown over them‚ they then reach out chirping and begging for food but when flown backwards the mother goose now resembles a hungry falcon‚ the geese then try to hide and stop chirping‚ Humans‚ how you scream at a spider did our ancestors run from an arachnid that was twenty times

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    The Fear of Science

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    The Fear of Science To live in the today’s world is to be surrounded by the products of science. For it is science that gave our society color television‚ the bottle of aspirin‚ and the polyester shirt. Thus‚ science has greatly enhanced our society; yet‚ our society are still afraid of the effect of science. This fear of science can be traced back to the nineteenth century where scientist had to be secretative in experimenting with science. Although science did wonders in the nineteenth

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    The Great Fear

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    Times change and people come and go‚ but fear is a constant‚ and in "The Great Fear" by J. Ronald Oakley‚ he describes the wave of fear that occurred in the 1950s. In 1692‚ the townspeople of Salem were scared into believing that they were among witches‚ and in 1950’s the "Red" Scare destroyed thousands of peoples lives that were accused of being Communists. Those accused in both witch hunts were put on trial‚ and while many were killed in Salem‚ the Red Scare had blacklisted those persecuted. The

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