"Fear in 1984" Essays and Research Papers

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    Fear of Failure

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    Tens of thousands of 18-year-olds will graduate this year and be handed meaningless diplomas. These diplomas won’t look any different from those awarded their luckier classmates. Their validity will be questioned only when their employers discover that these graduates are semiliterate. 2 Eventually a fortunate few will find their way into educational-repair shops--adult-literacy programs‚ such as the one where I teach basic grammar and writing. There‚ high-school graduates and high-school dropouts

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    Fear Essay

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     especially in the south‚ much of the popularity  of the Klan was due to the perception that conservative Anglo­Saxon Protestantism needed to  defend itself against Catholics‚ Jews‚ immigrants‚ woman suffrage‚ resistance to prohibition‚ and  evolution.   Blacks lived in fear of physical punishment‚ just as in the days of the first Klan.  Catholics were targeted with cross burnings‚ economic boycotts‚ and assaults. One group  convinced themselves that they were actually going to lynch the Pope.  Little community of Nor

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    State of Fear

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    State of Fear 1. In the first couple of chapters‚ a laboratory experiment dealing with tsunami waves were introduced‚ a mysterious buyer purchases deadly cavitation technology‚ and a submarine was leased. This will come together later on in the book. Morton is a philanthropist who donates money to the environmental cause and Evans is his lawyer. Along with Kenner‚ Sanjong‚ and Sarah‚ their goal was to stop these “natural” disasters from happening. Morton gets into a car accident and was pronounced

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    1984 Totalitarianism

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    lives of every citizen. In other words‚ governments like those are considered totalitarian‚ They control all parts of society‚ including the daily life of their inhabitants. Total submissiveness is required‚ and opposition is punished severely. In 1984 by George Orwell‚ the reader can infer that the government is totalitarian based on their ideals and values. Especially in aspects surrounding society and everyday life‚ Big Brother’s party is evidently a totalitarian regime. As stated before‚ when

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    Overcoming a fear

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    A Night to Remember My heart was pounding rapidly; it felt like a thunderous roar in my ears. The blood was quickly drained from my face. I was slightly nauseous‚ the only thing that kept me from covering the other girls with the unsatisfying scarlet likes of my mothers tasteless spaghetti‚ was the loud wailing of my empty stomach. The pounding was louder now‚ so loud I could barely make out my own thoughts. How could a mere gathering of complete strangers cause these unlikely‚ unknown feelings

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    Manipulation In 1984

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    In 1984‚ George Orwell is quick to establish the totalitarian Big Brother as an omnipresent frontman to the oligarchy that is the Party. These figures are both constructed to be omnipotent; they demonstrate this power by distorting history‚ human nature‚ and the individual’s very singularity at a whim. This deception proves that manipulation is a powerful tool used in the assertion of dominance and for imposing conformity. "Everything faded into mist. The past was erased‚ the erasure was forgotten

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    Fear Of Conforming

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    The fear of failure often cuts the endurance of individuals to keep pursuing their dreams‚ alternatively‚ making individuals assume that it is better to do nothing than anything. For further explanation‚ the idea of conforming is so engrained into the mindsets of countless individuals‚ that being labelled as rebellious or going against the status quo‚ is completely ignored and felt as being irrational. As mentioned in lecture on October 13‚ people become accustomed to certain things and beliefs in

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    Analysis on 1984

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    ID NO. 402341 Wesley English II H 20 August 2010 Foreshadowing in 1984 Foreshadowing: the use of hints or clues to suggest what will happen later in a novel. Foreshadowing is often used to predict death or fortune and can be valuable for the reader ’s comprehension. In the novel 1984‚ George Orwell depicts a utopian society and a totalitarian government. Society is at constant war and freedom is crumbling. Death is everywhere along with poverty‚ and censorship.

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    Greatest Fear

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    Mazandrea Guiam Class 151B-20 Essay #2‚ Prompt #1 Trying Something Out For the First Time Everyone has their biggest fears‚ and growing up‚ mine was to experience a rollercoaster ride. My fear for heights has always made a big impact on me. From being not able to look down from a bridge for more than ten seconds to still getting petrified when that elevator ride gives that “floating” feeling‚ being afraid of heights tend to always make me different from others. It made me feel shameful every

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    Power in 1984

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    The theme of power is prominent in the dystopian novel 1984 by George Orwell and throughout this book he develops two different types of power. This is collective power and individual power‚ which will both be addressed separately. Firstly‚ the notion of power through the collective is characterised through the totalitarian Party in Airstrip One‚ Oceania‚ one of the three super-states. In chapter 3 Part 3‚ Winston claims that‚ “The Party seeks power entirely for its own sake”‚ and that power comes

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