Earl Zibell Summer Reading 8-17-14 Entry One In the novel 1984, a man named Winston Smith is the main character of this novel. The novel describes Winston Smith as thin and frail. Winston is thirty nine years old. He has a varicose ulcer above his right ankle. Winston Smith chooses to take the stairs because the elevator breaks down frequently. When he walks up each flight of stairs, Winston comes across a huge poster with a large face that says, “Big Brother Is Watching You.” Big Brother is the leader of the party. Winston Smith is a member of the party but not a high enough official. He doesn’t agree on what the party does. The party listens and controls what every citizen does. Even though Winston Smith is a …show more content…
One motif that I noticed was technology in society. I came up with this motif because of the hidden microphones. Also because of the telescreens in every citizens room. Another motif in the novel 1984 is manipulation. The government manipulates the citizens. An example of this is when the government barley gives the citizens enough food and the government says there getting enough. Another motif that is in this book is separation. Separation is a motif because no one is allowed to truly love somebody. The government wants all the peoples energy saved for the government. Another motif is Big Brother Is Watching. That’s a motif because it’s saying that someone is always watching you. Big Brother is the ruler of …show more content…
One of the major characters is Winston Smith. He is thirty nine years old. Winston is thin and frail. Winston Smith is very rebellious. Winston is rebellious because he hates the government. An example of this is when he writes in his diary, “Down with Big Brother”. Another character of the novel 1984 is Julia. Julia has dark hair and is beautiful. She becomes Winston’s lover in the novel. Julia and Winston both hate the government. Another character in the novel is O’Brien. O’Brien is a powerful member of the inner party. He goes to Winston Smiths jail cell to brainwash him. During the process O’Brien admits that the Brotherhood was a lie and he was pretending. Another character that is important in the novel is Big Brother. Big Brother is the ruler of Oceania. There are posters of Big Brother that say, “Big Brother is Watching You”. There is also a Big Brother images stamped on coins and the
1984 by George Orwell describes a dystopian society in which Winston Smith, the main character, resides. The society, Oceania, is controlled by The Party, which maintains its regime by employing Thought Police that apprehend anyone with grievances against The Party, or its figure head, Big Brother. The story begins when Winston purchases a blank diary, in which he writes anything he finds necessary to document; this ranges from daily events to anti-Party messages. The first part of the novel describes the totalitarian nature of The Party through the daily experiences of Winston. When Winston bumps into a girl he until this point despised, he receives a note from her saying that she loves him. Upon reading this note, Winston is initially paranoid
Winston Smith, George Orwell’s main character from 1984, contributes greatly to the novel in many ways. While he is presented to be a simple man, Winston adds many complex ideas to the classic piece of literature. Orwell uses internal and external characteristics, symbols, and significant quotes to develop Winston’s role in 1984.
To make the character Winston Smith, the main protagonist from the book 1984, complex, George Orwell had to give his character multiple traits to keep Winston from being another boring, vague, and 2-dimensional character. Winston is a complex character because he undergoes emotional changes throughout the book, he has a variety of personality traits to drive the plot, and he has significant interactions with other characters throughout 1984.
In 1984, George Orwell demonstrates Big Brother's power through their ability to unknowingly harm Winston, the protagonist, physically. For instance, Winston’s varicose ulcer acts as a physical representation of his rebellious thoughts. Because Winston cannot openly contain or act on his resentment for Big Brother, it manifests itself in his body. The progression and eventual destruction of the relationship between Winston and his varicose ulcer by Big Brother shows that Big Brother’s power end is the ability to indirectly physically harm its citizens.
<Interesting Intro> 1984 takes place in a society where the government controls everything and everyone, including ones thoughts. Some characters battle with the outward conformity, where they are supposed to act and think like a party member, and with the inward questioning that makes them rebel against the party. The author, George Orwell, witnessed totalitarian societies with his own eyes. Because of this, Orwell sends a message through the book by trying to show how totalitarian societies are bad. Orwell uses Winston as a symbol that shows how totalitarian societies are not beneficial to the people and can make them live double lives.
In “1984”, Winston is a normal staff working for the “big brother” and his job is to change the history in order to change people’s mind. For example, if the government says there will be two chocolates per a person instead of three chocolates. Then all the news and old news need to change to two chocolates per a person, like three chocolates per a person was never happend. Also, in this novel Winston gets catched by being with Julia, after they caught him they tortured him and make him admit that 2+2=5 not 4. “He wrote first in large clumsy capitals ‘FREEDOM IS SLAVERY’ Then almost without a pause he wrote beneath it: ‘TWO AND TWO MAKE FIVE’. He wrote ‘GOD IS POWER.’ He accepted everything.”(pg. 277) He tried to fight against the party after he got a book that’s against totalitarian but after all the torture and brainwash he starts to feel he could not fight the party any longer. So that shows how Big Brother
Characters and conflict are both heavily reliant on each other and both are needed for a functioning story. In the book 1984, Winston Smith, the main character, and Big Brother both play major roles in the stories conflict. Winston Smith is a minor member of the Ministry of Truth which along with two other Ministries rules over London. Winston is an intelligent and thoughtful, but weak and frail 39-year-old man. In Order to freely express himself Winston has a diary and goes to the slums of the city where he will not be monitored by the parties of big brother. Winston believes that he has a revolutionary dream that could change his and many others lives but is being oppressed by the parties totalitarian control over his life. Throughout the
In the novel 1984, written by George Orwell, “Big Brother” is the face of the party in control of the dystopian society of Oceania. Big Brother plays the role of what might be considered the most important character in the novel; without this character, the government would have much less control over the public. It is because of Big Brother that Winston and Julia get themselves a private apartment, and it is also because of Big Brother that they get caught later in the novel. He is shown to be “larger than life” as Winston Smith is told that Big Brother exists as the embodiment of the party, and can never die. In a sense, Big Brother symbolizes the party
The main character in George Orwell’s book 1984 is a thirty-nine year old man with the name of Winston Smith. Winston Smith creates thought crimes, he also has anti-Party views. The story “1984” tells about all of Winston Smith’s struggles. In an effort to avoid being monitored, Winston physically conforms to society, however mentally he does just the opposite. Winston is a thin, frail and intellectual thirty-nine year old. Winston hates totalitarian control and enforced repression that are characteristics of his government. Winston hates being watched by Big Brother. He always has revolutionary dreams, he feels like he would be protected. Julia is Winston’s lover, a beautiful dark- haired girl working in the
In 1984 Winston is described as a major, protagonist, and dynamic character. Winston is the main character in the novel, Orwell creates an atmosphere where the reader is in Winston’s mind which helps the reader to better understand him and the world of Oceania in his eyes. In the
The book, 1984 by George Orwell, is about the external and internal conflicts that take place between the two main characters, Winston and Big Brother and how the two government ideas of Democracy and totalitarianism take place within the novel. Orwell wrote the novel around the idea of communism/totalitarianism and how society would be like if it were to take place. In Orwell’s mind democracy and communism created two main characters, Winston and Big Brother. Big Brother represents the idea of the totalitarian party. In comparison to Big Brother, Winston gives and represents the main thought of freedom, in the novel Winston has to worry about the control of the thought police because he knows that the government with kill anyone who
The dystopian novel 1984, written by George Orwell, depicts the life of Winston Smith as he lived it in the year nineteen eighty four. Winston is a low-ranking member of an entity called the Party, the governing body of the city of London. The Party is represented by a single figure known as Big Brother, an all-knowing and an omnipresent factor in the lives of those that follow the Party. Although no one knows who he truly is, Big Brother still holds tremendous weight in the lives of Party members. The structure of the government in the novel mirrors the principles of Marxism, an economic system that focuses on the means of production and class struggle within a given society (Jakse ).In 1984, George Orwell uses key principles of Marxism to convey the Party’s ability to naturalize its dominance over the inhabitants of Oceania.
The story began by introducing the main character Winston Smith. Winston worked for the government, rewriting the history of Oceania to make Big Brother seem all-powerful. This showed the extreme measures Big Brother went to so that it would not be overthrown. Winston disagreed with the government, but kept his feelings hidden to escape persecution from the thought police. Since Winston was keeping his dissatisfaction from everyone, he was very paranoid. He judged everyone as if they were a spy waiting to catch him and take him to prison. Although odd, Winston symbolized the good left in a society where there was not much good.
These themes play not only an important role in 1984, but they also connect to the world of the readers. Orwell discussed the theme of individuality in 1984, in order to reveal its limitation under a totalitarian government. In 1984, the Party didn’t want any “lower-class” citizens to be distinct, and Orwell demonstrated the type of monotonous society and lifestyle, that would exist under a government with total control. Orwell’s purpose of discussing the theme of individuality to the readers, was to try to convince them that individuality is a privilege, and to embrace everyone’s uniqueness and qualities. In 1984, all the characters lived a similar life, and there was nothing interesting occurring in society. However, in the world of the readers, some people try to be like others, and I think Orwell is trying to persuade the readers to embrace their individuality, because they have the freedom to do so. Orwell also discussed the theme of government in the novel. In the novel, Orwell portrayed the government as a powerful and strong group, and stated that life under the Party will have “… no emotions except fear, rage, triumph, and self-abasement…” In 1984, Orwell demonstrated the negative influence and impact of having a “dictatorial” government. The characters couldn’t express their thoughts or emotions, and this had a major influence on Winston’s growing hatred for the Party. Orwell’s
In the dystopian novel of 1984 Winston Smith struggles with the totalitarian society and its brutal regime. Winston struggles throughout the course of the book finds his own thoughts and starting a rebellion. The brotherhood has quite a striking similarity to the German society during Hitler's reign. The totalitarian government in 1984 relates to the oppression of censoring ideas,controlling a group's thoughts, and forcing “citizens” to follow a uniform and strict policy. A totalitarian government looks to use ultimate power to control the people that live under them and dictate their lifestyle. 1984 The Party is thought of as all knowing and strictly enforces the laws to the people of Oceania. In Nazi Germany fear was instilled into its citizens , absolute rule was practiced, and values were instilled to be believed either correct or incorrect.