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    1984 Technology Analysis

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    adverse opinion on increasing technological development. He justifies‚ by implementing more technology into society‚ people become content and ignorant in their daily lives. Technology allows people to see the world without actually going anywhere. In 1984 by George Orwell‚ The government employs technology to control their citizens‚ for instance; The Party uses technology to keep the civilians incognizant of what is truly going on around them. Utilizing this in their society also allows The Party to

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    1984 moral dilemma

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    extent is a character’s courage or strength revealed through confrontation with a moral dilemma? Moral dilemmas can lead to either revealing courage and/or strength in a literary work or they may simply show the lack of it. In George Orwell’s 1984‚ courage and/or strength are revealed through confrontation with the moral dilemma of Winston rebelling against the party fuelled by his hate vs. surrendering because of the controlling and powerful party and the consequences of his actions. In the

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    Diary Entry for 1984

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    5 October 2010 Dear Julia‚ I am so very delighted that I can communicate with you. I would like to stress that this is a great honor for me. In the novel 1984 I strongly believe you play one of the outstanding roles. The reason for writing this letter to you is that I have read the novel and analyzed every character. More by the leading roles Winston ‚ O’Brian I am most impressed by you. Foolish of me I should have introduced myself earlier. My name is Bazardari Narmandakh‚ I am 18 years‚ and

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    1984 passage analysis

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    George Orwell in his dystopian novel 1984 manifestly reveals the oppressive nature of society‚ and Winston’s attitude toward it. He uses both the setting of life and Winston’s general thoughts about that era as a tool to express the true nature of society‚ and to show that it hasn’t always been that way‚ and that it is not the natural order of things. The society that Orwell describes in this passage is portrayed as a dark‚ crowded and gruesome place. He quotes‚ “A low ceilinged‚ crowded room‚

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    1984 Critical Analysis

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    10/23/11 1984 critical analysis In the novel 1984 by George Orwell a man named Winston lives within a dis-utopian society. People within this society keep their emotions non-noticeable because if they go against what the inner circle is teaching than that person would work manually labor for the rest of their life. In the story a party known as the inner circle uses a few slogans and sayings to control everything. The inner circle uses all that they say to brainwash people into believing what

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    1984 Totalitarianism Essay

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    Totalitarianism: A World of Terror Totalitarian is defined as “of or relating to a political regime based on subordination of the individual to the state and strict control of all aspects of the life and productive capacity of the nation especially by coercive measures (as censorship and terrorism) (Totalitarian)”. Through totalitarianism the government is able to completely control its citizens. This can cause everyone to no longer be individuals‚ no longer be creative‚ and no longer be imaginative

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    The book 1984‚ written by George Orwell‚ describes a world where people have no privacy. They were being watched every single second‚ and they weren’t allowed to have their own thoughts. This novel may sound unrealistic‚ but there are some relations between the world today and the world in 1984. And this novel warns us that‚ if totalitarianism were not opposed‚ some situations described in 1984 could become a reality in the future. Throughout the book‚ Winston was described as a character who has

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    1984 Thematic Essay

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    By: Jared Miller 1984 was written by George Orwell about a grim future in which people are controlled by a party known as the brotherhood which is led by Big Brother. The background of the story is that nuclear war has ravaged the earth and three superpowers have arisen out of the rubble‚ Oceania‚ Eurasia‚ and Eastasia‚ all of which are at war with each other. The leading party in Oceania‚ where the story takes place‚ experts maintain its power through such techniques as "Spies"‚ a youth group

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    Othello And 1984 Analysis

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    Power can be gained in many ways‚ one of these is through censorship‚ in these books; Othello‚ Fahrenheit 451‚ and 1984‚ we see this theme of censorship pop up in many ways‚ whether this be censorship of oneself‚ or censorship of others to ultimately gain control and power. In Othello‚ we see this theme of censorship of oneself‚ as Iago carefully censors what information he tells to which people in order to retain his level of trust he has with other people. This is the result of censorship on a

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    regulated‚ Thoughtcrime makes original or rebellious thoughts forbidden‚ and the existence of the Thought Police makes it so that even if he did want to conjure rebellious thoughts‚ he knows he will be caught and severely punished. The conditioning in 1984 is more ambiguous than that of Brave New World‚ but still there are similarities‚ such as the ‘Two Minutes Hate’ and the ‘Solidarity Service’‚ which both facilitate feverish‚ animalistic emotions from the participants‚ and solidify their acquiescence

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