Love is not an uncommon subject. It is heard all the time in countless books and movies. The reason the concept is so common is because love is an emotion easy to relate to. People long to be in love, to feel love, and to give love. Love has a power that ultimately affects everyone in its path. George Orwell’s novel, 1984 illustrates the power that love can have on an individual throughout the book. In the beginning of the book 1984, Winston struggles with conforming to the government and does everything in his power to protect his thoughts from the Party. The knowledge that he holds could get him vaporized in no time. Winston is looking for an outlet for his rebellion and turns to the idea of an underground organization whose specific purpose is to cause the downfall of the government. During the process of his private search, a love interest emerges into Winston’s life. A passed note is all that is required to spark Winston’s fancy and eventually turns into a full-blown affair. Instances like this demonstrate the influence that love and lust can have on an individual. George Orwell’s 1984 is a prime example of how love can affect a person’s thoughts and actions. …show more content…
The note read “I love you” (90) and immediately caught Winston’s attention. He is flabbergasted and overwhelmed with mixed emotions regarding this note and this woman. Eventually the two meet and discuss their feelings towards each other. The woman is named Julia and always wears an Anti-Sex sash around her waist; ironically another meeting is arranged, but this time with underlying motives. To love another human was rebellion against the Party and sex was not supposed to be an enjoyable act. Winston, up to this point, had not openly opposed the
In 1984 and “Harrison Bergeron”,complete faith in the government allows the government to implement practices from which the governors benefit, and not the ones governed. In the book 1984 by George Orwell, the people are governed by one ruling party, which controls all aspects of life and supported by almost all its citizens. The main character of the book is named Winston Smith and throughout the book, he begins to question the party and their doings. In the beginning Winston starts perform small revolts of his own, but as the plot progresses, his revolts become bigger and bigger. His biggest revolt was forming a sexual relationship with a woman, something that is strictly forbidden by the Party.
Many a literary critic claims that the strongest aspect of the book 1984 by George Orwell is its plot. Indeed, there is some merit in this conclusion, as the entire purpose of Orwell’s writing of this book was not to create a literary classic, but to warn the public about the dangers of communism if it got out of hand, and what better way to do this than to write an engaging plot? Others may claim that 1984’s greatest strength is in its character development. This aspect, too, is quite strong in the book, as not only are the minor characters effected in serving the dystopian theme, but the major characters are believable and very human in their failings. Winston’s transformation from an oppressed office worker to revolutionary and finally
The protagonist in the novel, “1984 by George Orwell”, is Winston Smith. Winston portrays his life in a way to understand and feel the horrible ways of a totalitarian society of Oceania. Winston was made as an ordinary man who tries to make his life better in a world gone wrong. The situation Winston is in is that he has discovered that he is not fond of the government and wants to go “Down with Big Brother”. He is faced with mouthfuls of pain and misery and struggles throughout his daily life, yet still is able to have some time for love with helps with the bad situation.
The people of these two dystopias live under similar yet contrasting circumstances. But whether it be by burning books or altering memories, one message these authors were trying to spread prevails: there is nothing more dangerous than the human mind and what lies within it. 1984 follows Winston Smith, victim of the totalitarian
In George orwell’s book, 1984 shows a manipulative government that tries to dehumanize its people. Its dehumanizing effects are seen by the control and limitations of the people 's emotions and pleasures. Yet, how can they be stripped of their humanity if the people still feel remorse, love, and as they grow older their subconscious sees how truly imperfect the government is and they try to keep everything functioning by keeping some rules intact and that 's what being human is really about being perfect in the most imperfect way. The way that the history comes into place in this novel and how the character see it shows that rebellion is part of the human nature. Winston is so intrigued by it all and he wants to know more and knowledge
The protagonist of 1984, Winston Smith, is not loyal to the government that he works for, which is a serious crime. Consequently, he is sent to the correctional institution called the Ministry of Love, where he is told that “[n]o one who has ever gone astray is ever spared … We shall squeeze you empty and fill you with ourselves” (256). To achieve
1984 represents a dystopian novel as well as George Orwell 's attempt to warn people about the submissive society in which they could turn into by letting authorities take control over them. Considering the literary value of this text, it is worthy to analyze it profoundly focusing on the controversial topic of social relationships; particularly in love manifestation as it was strictly forbidden. Writing a letter based on this book approaching to its fifth chapter from the second part aims to emphasize the drastic changes that the pridden in the hypothetical world of the author. The protagonist, Winston Smith, suffered throughout the development of the story because of Julia, his love.
In George Orwell’s novel 1984 it portrays the dangers of a totalitarian government which causes some of the citizens the want to rebel. Most people learn how to live with the rules and regulations the party bestows upon them and are happy with there day to day lives and others begin to crave for a sense to express their own individuality and freedom. Throughout the book both Winston and Julia are noncompliance to the party in different ways compiling that if there is any hope in overthrowing the party it lies within the proles. Winston is a man coming to consciousness and attempting the overthrow or reformation of the closed, totalitarian, futuristic world he valued at the start (Huntington).
George Orwell’s 1984, has contains several out of the ordinary themes. From the opening of the novel Orwell paints Oceania as a gloomy, dingy place. He describes the physical emptiness of Oceania and hints at the decomposing of the human spirit. Toward the end of Section One, Orwell takes the reader deeper and begins to illustrate how the physical darkness of this totalitarian work is a reflection of the destruction of basic human values.
Through the novel’s tripartite structure, Orwell creates a dystopic setting that reflects a post-atomic world where totalitarianism had led to a loss of autonomy. Even familial links are sabotaged under the authoritarian rule of the Party as symbolised in the Parsons’ kids ‘All they think about is the spies and the war,’ alluding to Hitler Youth who were indoctrinated into the hatred of Jews, and performed espionage on behalf of the Nazis. This depraved trespass of family values highlights the vulnerability of humanity under political fundamentalism, explored in the characterisation of Winston as ‘downcast’ with a ‘varicose ulcer’. However, through the exploration of Winston’s relationship with Julia, Orwell highlights the endurance of a common humanity under a totalitarian rule. Orwell characterises Julia as the last remnants of free thought in the dystopic world of 1984, embodying autonomy that extends beyond the constraints of the Party as highlighted by the retrospective irony, ‘They can 't get to your heart.’
The novel describes the journey of Winston Smith as he rebels against the Party and tries to maintain his human qualities. By creating a totalitarian government in the novel 1984, George Orwell is able to express how important humanity is to not only Winston but also
The themes of Loyalty and Betrayal are apparent throughout 1984 by George Orwell. These two themes have a profound affect on Winston, the main character. It becomes rather apparent to the reader almost immediately that betrayal is a fear of his and loyalty is his desire. The author introduces these facts in the novel almost right away. The themes of Loyalty and Betrayal affect Winston throughout the novel by forcing him to alter his actions; he must hide his fear from the children spies, he gets betrayed by O'Brien, and he decides to trust Julia and be loyal to her.
Affinity of Human Nature and Psychological Torture in George Orwell’s 1984 In the novel 1984, Orwell depicts a society in which the entire people conform to one looming belief. Through the character of Winston, Orwell presents us with a figure to exhibit the important qualities of human nature. Winston’s unique nonconformity in this dystopian society lead to a string of psychological torment inflicted upon him, which eventually molds his thoughts to Party ideals.
The Curious Relationship Between Julia and Winston The government of Oceania in George Orwell’s 1984 stresses strict restrictions on love. The Party claims that relationships of love diverge focus from Big Brother. Yet in this society,there are rebels that still forge relationships despite the pressures placed on them to prevent love.
In 1984, the party strives to get rid of love as a result it takes citizens away from devoting their life to big brother. Within the George Orwell dystopian novel, 1984, the main character Winston Smith lives in an exceedingly totalitarian society. The reason of making an attempt to eliminating love from the lives of its citizens is because it’s viewed as a threat towards the control of the party. Winston forms a forbidden relationship with Julia and together along share the rebellious feelings they have towards the party, big brother. Winston and Julia were aware their relationship was against the parties values so much so that they would be arrested.