"George orwell good bad books and writers and the leviathan" Essays and Research Papers

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    The Good The Bad Analysis

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    readily agree that TV shows have a great impact on our life and beliefs. Where this agreement usually ends‚ however is on the question does it make us smarter in the real facts about the American society. Jason Zinger writer of “The Good‚ The Bad‚ and The Daily Show” and Antonia Peacocke writer of “Family Guy and Freud: Jokes and their relation to the unconscious” both maintain the same view of how harsh comedy is used in both shows. They differ entirely in their portrayal of how the shows comedy is conducted

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    George Orwell the narrator states in the beginning of the story how he is hated by a large amount of people. The reason he is disliked by the Burmese is because he stands for a figure of everything they despise‚ Orwell works as a sub-divisional police officer in Moulmein to all of them he represents British authority over Burmese’s. He states examples on how being a police officer always made him an easy target‚ Orwell would stroll around‚ and young men everywhere would pause until the was at a safe

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    In George Orwell’s 1984‚ the world has been portrayed in a poverty-stricken dystopian society with three different nations waging a perpetual war. In the movie The Matrix directed by Lana Wachowski‚ the world is machine controlled. Humans are kept in a deep sleep‚ without realizing that their reality is false. They are similar because both depict the absolute control that a government has over its own people and the control over reality. They are different in that Winston’s true reality was eventually

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    Censorship: Good and Bad.

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    When someone thinks of censorship‚ some might think about the government trying to hide information from the public. Others might think of books and literature that has been censored because of "offensive material". Sometimes it’s good‚ sometimes it’s bad. A good example of censorship is this‚ the country is at war‚ and they are planning an attack on their enemy. The media present has no right to know how or when the military will strike‚ and we the public have no right to know it either. If the

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    3: In Paragraph 4‚ Orwell uses a simile to compare "phrases tacked together" to "sections of a prefabricated henhouse". That shows how prose consists of words that aren’t necessarily chosen for their meaning‚ but instead just because it’s easy. In Paragraph 12‚ Orwell uses a similie to compare someone "choking" to "tea leaves blocking a sink"‚ which shows how the author knows what he wants to say‚ but sometimes he has too many "stale phrases" in his head. In paragraph 15‚ Orwell uses a similie to

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    (Pew Research Center). As government control progresses‚ the problem is assumed to continue to grow in power. While technology allows easier access to information and better communication‚ the backlash could be catastrophic. In the novel 1984‚ George Orwell predicts to some extent‚ totalitarianism in everyday life. He uses setting‚ characterization‚ and action to set the scene for increasing government control. The setting of 1984 consists of

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    George Orwell uses music to set the tone in 1984. In some instances‚ it inspires Winston Smith‚ the protagonist‚ or represents a need for something he cannot get from the Party. In others‚ it reminds him of tragedy‚ and in certain instances‚ it contains valuable insight from the past. It also represents Winston’s happiness between himself and Julia and predicts Winston’s fate. Music in 1984 plays an important role in the overall attitude of the novel. In the first instance‚ Winston hears a

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    Questions 1)George Orwell has an extremely scornful attitude towards imperialism. He views it as a corrupt form of government. He has a strong disgust for the native people‚ as they continually harass him on a daily basis. They attempt to trip him on the soccer field‚ laugh and make fun of him. Orwell dislikes his position in Burma‚ as he frequently states that he does not like having power and ruling over a foreign people. Many times the masses of people tend to go around what Orwell is attempting

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    Prisoned Mind Throughout history‚ leaders such as Adolf Hitler and Joseph Stalin have used propaganda as a means of gaining power. Similarly‚ In 1984‚ George Orwell creates the character Big Brother as a leader who already has power over his people‚ but needs a way to preserve. By causing distrust in the community through the use of thought manipulation and telescreens‚ Big Brother is able to establish totalitarian rule over the people. The thought police is responsible for causing disunity in the

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    Reading the classical dystopian literature of ‘1984’ by George Orwell has led me to the conclusion that it functions as a warning of the dangers of totalitarianism. Orwell projects a negative utopia‚ or dystopia‚ of a future totalitarian society through ‘1984’ which uses psychological manipulation‚ surveillance‚ and a repressive bureaucracy to exert total power over the individual. After reviewing several critics‚ it is proven that all of them agree with this statement. Among these critics are Nicole

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