"Rhetorical strategy in shooting an elephant by george orwell" Essays and Research Papers

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    The best feeling in the world is love and happiness. In today’s society‚ we are very fortunate to experience love‚ happiness‚ and liberty. After reading the works of Aldous Huxley and George Orwell‚ it made me realise how different my society is compared to the depiction of the future by Huxley and Orwell. Orwell described the future as if we live under a dictator‚ and Huxley described it as “everyone can have their needs‚ as long as you let me be in complete power”. In today’s society‚ we have

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    associate with and what they are allowed to say. A totalitarian government even tries to control what people think and what they believe. George Orwell wrote 1984 in the late 1940s. What he knew about totalitarianism was based on the Soviet Union and Nazi Germany. Those governments had come into being not that long before and they weren’t well understood yet. I believe Orwell was trying to give his readers a clear picture of what life would be like if a free country like England were under totalitarian rule

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    (Chapman). Symbolism is important in a novel to deliver a point to the reader. Freedom is something that most people have in their lives‚ however in Nineteen Eighty-Four by George Orwell‚ this is not the case. The novel brings the reader to a world where freedom is something of the past that most people do not remember anymore. Orwell uses many symbols as a creative way to portray the themes of the novel. He uses the telescreens‚ the red armed prole woman‚ and the glass paperweight to symbolize freedom

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    The way “Shooting an Elephant” and “A Modest Proposal” starts is one of the differences these essays has. At first‚ we have “A Modest proposal”‚ it starts explaining how you may see when you enter to the country that he lives in the poor women who have many children and can’t feed them. Basically‚ he is showing us or telling us that there were a lot of poverty in those times. Is telling us that there were a lot of people without work and their work was pleading for money. Furthermore‚ it was a tough

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    “Power is in tearing human minds to pieces and putting them together again in new shapes of your own choosing” (Orwell 336). The use of propaganda‚ destruction of language‚ rewriting of history‚ and brainwashing of the population are some of the ways a government may exercise their authority over the inhabitants. In the novel 1984‚ by George Orwell this is exactly how the totalitarian government uses its influence over its citizens. The extreme power and control the Party has over the population

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    and basic rights‚ they are able to drastically affect how people act and think in their society. In George Orwell’s 1984‚ the oppressive Party is able to retain control over the citizens

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    Manipulation of Language and Communication in George Orwell’s Nineteen Eighty-Four George Orwell‚ like many literary scholars‚ is greatly interested in the power of language when used as an instrument for manipulation of thought and establishing political domination. He believes that totalitarianism and the corruption of language are connected‚ and focuses on this idea in a number of his works‚ in the hopes of bringing public awareness to the government and media’s abuse of language to reshape truth

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    not allowed to have any independence whatsoever. Each person that is manipulated would turn into a mindless drone if the world was taught to believe something that incorrect. Through psychological scare tactics and the creation of new invention‚ George Orwell presents a theme that no person should be manipulated by any other individual in any society because it leads to the destruction of one’s individuality and free expression. With psychological scare tactics‚ the Party threatens the public and

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    this horrendous event‚ performed by 19 militants associated with the Islamic extremist group al-Qaeda‚ their fellow Muslims have been the victims of racial profiling. This type of discrimination can also be seen in the book 1984 by George Orwell. While America and George Orwell’s Oceania have many differences‚ they still share many similarities concerning terror

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    George Orwell Animal Farm Animal Farm by George Orwell is an animalistic adaptation of the struggle between Tolstoy and Stalin in the early 20th Century within the Soviet Union. Power and authority can be gained‚ maintained and lost all of these three things happen in the novel. The pigs on the farm Snowball‚ Napoleon & Squealer gained power by using persuasion techniques and being the smartest animals on the farm. At the start of the novel Old-Major gave a very persuading speech about how

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