"Huxley orwell postman" Essays and Research Papers

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    supposed to be protecting. One day he is presented a problem that he had two potential ways to solve‚ the non-lethal choice that wouldn’t gain him any brownie points with the townsfolk or a slightly more lethal choice that would gain him a multitude. Orwell choses the later and ends up realizing that he had made huge mistake. He feels extremely guilty‚ because progressively

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    Throughout the dystopian novel 1984‚ Orwell illustrates a country with no ambition by incorporating varying tones‚ irony and paradoxes into the writing. Irony and paradoxes meaning possess similarities because the two literary devices contain contradicting thoughts. However‚ a paradox reveals the truth through a contradicting statement while irony differs by containing humor. Furthermore‚ the authors’ tone creates a tremendous influence on the citizens’ judgments by putting emphasis on certain words

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    Second Part Baldwin and Orwell found themselves in foreign countries surrounded by strangers in a time of personal crisis. How did these experiences help transform their views of themselves and where they came from? Baldwin left America on an identity search. Baldwin didn’t want to be subjected to American labeling by color. Instead he stated that he wanted to find out in what way the specialness of his experience could be made to connect him with other people instead of dividing him from them.

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    Shooting An Elephant In “Shooting an Elephant’‚ George Orwell described the onus of serving with the imperial police in Lower Burma‚ during a time where the British police were hated by the natives. Orwell expressed his views towards the Burmese‚ saying “Theoretically—and secretly‚ of course—I was all for the Burmese and all against their oppressors‚ the British.” Though he felt that way‚ they did not feel the same towards him. “As a police officer I was an obvious target and was baited whenever

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    Orwell was also incorrect in the way he believed newspeak would be used. He never expressed the belief that a group besides the leaders would use newspeak. Today newspeak has been swapped for the term political correctness. "The notion of political correctness came into use among communists in the 1930s as a semi-humorous reminder that the party’s interest is to be treated as a reality that ranks above reality itself."(Codevilla) This quote is saying that whatever the leaders tell must be true and

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    exiting new people‚ However‚ Huxley used this as a juxtaposition to emphasise the bland‚ tasteless people of his dystopian society. Huxley’s use of the satirical title was to warn his high cultured audience -who would be familiar with the quote- about the current hype of the recent industrial revolution and how technology would eventually replace emotion and individuality if the trends of the period were to continue. Thus resulting in a bleak dystopian society as Huxley accurately represents and mocks

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    well. The writer‚ George Orwell‚ is able to make multiple statements by using each element of his fiction as not just a part of his entire message‚ but also a means to give a single criticisms individually. This is made apparent within the first page of the book with the immediately noticeable dystopian fiction element of the presence of a figurehead. The figurehead made present is Big Brother‚ who is introduced with the prominent phrase‚ “BIG BROTHER IS WATCHING YOU” (Orwell 7). Big Brother

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    possession’. The consequences of being caught reinforce these fears‚ including draconian forms of punishment‚ then the eventual healing. ‘We do not merely destroy our enemies‚ we change them’. Other means include the war between the superstates. Orwell represents this as an imposture‚ keeping the masses in perpetual fear. ‘In our own day they are not fighting against one another at all. The war is waged by each ruling group against its own subjects‚ and the object of the war is to keep the structure

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    In the excerpt from the novel 1984‚ Orwell uses a simile and 3rd person limited point of view to describe protagonist Winston’s oppressive world where the government controls even thoughts. In doing so‚ Orwell emphasizes a theme about a government with too much power over information and surveillance. Orwell uses a simile to compare a police patrol helicopter to a bluebottle fly. Inside his flat‚ Winston nervously watches from his window as “a helicopter skimmed down between the roofs‚ hovered for

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    George Orwell’s Shooting an Elephant: a Summary George Orwell‚ from a first person narrative perspective of a British officer in Moulmein‚ Burma‚ writes an autobiographical essay titled Shooting an Elephant‚ confessing the inner conflict of a British police officer. From his experience in British-ruled India in the early Twentieth Century‚ his essay shows feelings in the area and the East against Europe‚ and faults of the imperialism. While he was there he is having to do something that caused ethical

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