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Comparison Of 1984 And The Cry. ... The people of Air Strip One (or Britain)
in 1984 live in a dictatorship controlled by The Party. ...
1984 revisisted. 1984 as an Anti-Utopian Novel A utopia is an ideal or perfect
community. ... George Orwell creates an anti-utopian society in the novel 1984 . ...
1984 by George Orwell a comparison to the world. ... The theme of 1984 is more
likely to be obedience of the people more than oppression. ...
1984 analysis. History and 1984 “War is peace. Freedom is Slavery. ... Government
in the 1930’s was what pushed Orwell to write 1984. ...
Harrison Bergeon Vs. 1984. Harrison Bergeron vs. 1984 Harrison Bergeron
and 1984 were both based on a similar concept. This ...
Submitted by oppapers on November 29, 2000
Category: English
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1984:The Quintessential Negative Utopia
(Or How to become really depressed about the future of the human condition in 267 pages or less.)
1984 is George Orwell\'s arguably his most famous novel, and it remains one of the most powerful warnings ever made against the dangers of a totalitarian society. George Orwell was primarily a political novelist as a result of his life experiences. In Spain, Germany, and Russia, Orwell had seen for himself the peril of absolute political authority in an age of advanced technology; he illustrated that peril harshly in 1984.
Orwell\'s book could be considered the most acknowledged in the genre of the negative utopian novel. The mood of the novel aims to portray a pessimistic future. This prospect is to show the worst human society imaginable and to convince readers to avoid any path that might lead toward societal degradation. Orwell\'s world of post-atomic dictatorship, in which every individual is ceaselessly monitored through the telescreen seemed just possible enough to terrify. When Orwell postulated such a society it was only 35 years into the future that made the horror depicted by the novel seem more relevant and real.
While the year 1984 has long since come and gone it is more than obvious that the world Orwell describes has not materialized. But the message of 1984 remains relevant enough to frighten, and accurate enough to feel possible. War is used as a device for political manipulation on television--a concept presented strikingly in the recent film Wag the Dog. The governmental forces have historical records rewritten to match the political ideology of the ruling Party. This is a technique has been used by the Soviet Union and is still all too common in some parts of the world. The warning remains significant: the world has not completely escaped from the dangers Orwell describes.
The novel is based on the experiences of Winston Smith, an insignificant member of the ruling Party in...
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