"Mind control george orwell 1984" Essays and Research Papers

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    In 1984George Orwell has demonstrated the possibilities of two main characters who have contradicting traits can fall deeply in love. Although they are both secret rebels of the party and they both hate the Party’s totalitarian power in Oceania‚ Winston and Julia still bear a striking difference from each other. They are different in physical appearances‚ their views upon life‚ and their motivation towards the rebellion. Despite their contrasting beliefs and traits‚ the couple still manages to

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    through language‚ from the lyrics of songs to emotion packed novels and countless other forms. In George Orwell’s dystopian novel 1984‚ the society of a nation known as Oceania is under constant control and surveillance from a government called the Party. The Party’s stability and continued power rely on the inability of the people to have emotions or thoughts‚ as that could lead to rebellion. In order to control the people‚ the Party manipulated the language by using its slogans and a language known as

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    Control in 1984

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    In the Novel 1984 by George OrwellOrwell depicts the theme of psycological control. Some examples in the novel of psycological control was doublethink‚ two minute hate‚ and room 101. First‚ one of the examples of the theme psycological control was that people were not allowed to doublethink. Doublethink is when one hold two different ideas on ones mind. "Doublethink means the power of holding two contradictory beliefs in ones mind by holding two contradictory beliefs in ones mind simutaneously

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    Modern day technology is basically parallel to the world in 1984. The difference is society voluntarily inserts themselves into technological control. The advances we have had in technology such as smart tv’s‚ social media‚ and how the government controls society’s minds are examples of how we mirror Oceania’s totalitarian government. Modern life merely resemembles the life presented in George Orwell’s 1984. Oceania’s government’s goal was to brainwash its’ citizens into believing that the way they

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    Abraham Lincoln once said “History isn’t history unless it is the truth”. In the book‚ 1984 by George Orwell‚ he is warning us that while it is important for a government to maintain a level of secrecy‚ it causes a corrupt society because people can not trust one another‚ not knowing the truth can alter your judgement on society‚ and not knowing the truth can hurt you. At the beginning of the story you can see that people can not trust one another because it causes a corrupt society. In chapter

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    always watching him. Readers feel hope as he starts to have thoughts against the party‚ hoping that he will be the one to put an end to this awful regime. In the end‚ he is not a hero. He ends up betraying his love interest and falling back under control of Big Brother‚ having contributed nothing to the rebelling and making no change in his world. This story makes the reader feel shock and fear as they read about the conditions the people have to face and how at the end they are able to get the protagonist

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    Spencer Aksland Mr. Dunne English 12 October 4‚ 2012 In the novel “1984” by George Orwell the theme of betrayal is reoccurring throughout. We see different elements of betrayal in each part of this book. From the reader’s introduction into the society of Oceania. To the events leading up to the ultimate betrayal. The character that we see this world through is Winston Smith. His experience is meant to be that of the average party member. What he goes through could be the same as many others

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    Power is the strength and authority to control one’s thoughts‚ actions‚ and beliefs. In the novel 1984‚ the reader is exposed to the concept of power through manipulation and fear solely by Big Brother. He plays a big role in damaging the mental and physical state of Oceanians and also utilizes his power to benefit him and the Party. Restricting individualism‚ psychological manipulation‚ and reverse psychology are used in order for Big Brother to secure a dystopian‚ uniform society under the jurisdiction

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    1984 by George Orwell Summary: The book is set in a fictive future in the year 1984. The world is split into three totalitarian super-states: Oceania (North and South-America‚ Britain and Ireland‚ Australia and South-Africa)‚ Eurasia (Europe and Russia) and Eastasia (China).These three super-states are constantly at war with each other‚ regularly forming different alliances. Each one of the super-states is too powerful and strong to be defeated by an alliance of the two other super-states and therefore

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    technologies that has the potential to change our society like 1984. For example‚ the police now have a device that can read license plates and check if a car stolen or uninsured. Humans know that the National Security Agency can observe what we do online and Google searches. It also seems that almost every stores we would go to would always ask for our phone number and ZIP code as part of any transactions. If you have read the novel‚ 1984‚ we can see the many similar qualities that our world and Orwell’s

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