1982 Essay, Research Paper
Outline
Thesis Statement- This paper will examine how George Orwell wrote
1984 as a political statement against totalitarianism.
I Introduction
II Summary of 1984
III Roles of major Charters A. Big Brother B. Winston C. O’Brien D.
Julia E. Shop owner
IV Propaganda A. Ministry of Truth B. Ministry of Love
V Orwell’s thoughts on Totalitarianism A. From life experiences B.
From a writers point of view
VI Conclusion
Introduction
“Orwell observed that every line of serious work that I have
written since 1936 has been written directly or indirectly, against
totalitarianism and for democratic socialism, as I understand it”
(”George Orwell”). George Orwell has been a major contributor to
anticommunist literature around the World War II period. Orwell
lived in England during World War II, a time when the
totalitarianism state, Nazi Germany, was at war with England and
destroyed the city of London. ” I know that building’ said Winston
finally. Its a ruin now. It’s in the middle of the street outside
the Palace of Justice.’ That’s right. Outside the Law Courts. It
was bombed in-oh many years ago’” (Orwell 83). This reflects
Orwell’s own life experiences as a citizen in war torn England and
how he uses this in 1984. George Orwell is famous for two major
novels which attack totalitarianism. The first is Animal Farm a
satire describing the leaders of the Soviet Union as animals on an
animal farm. The second novel is 1984 a story of dictators who are
in complete control of a large part of the world after the Allies
lost in World War II. The government in this novel gives no
freedoms to its citizens. They live in fear because they are afraid
of having bad thoughts about the government of Oceania, a crime
punishable by death. This is the gem in Orwell’s collection of
novels against totalitarianism. This paper will show how George
Orwell wrote 1984 as a political statement against totalitarianism.
1984 is about life in a world where no personal freedoms exist.
Winston the main character, is a man of 39 who is not extraordinary
in either intelligence or character, but is disgusted with the
world he lives in. He works in the Ministry of Truth, a place where
history and the truth is rewritten to fit the party’s beliefs.
Winston is aware of the untruths, because he makes them true. This
makes him very upset with the government of Oceania, where Big
Brother, a larger than life figure, controls the people. His
dissatisfaction increases to a point where he rebels against the
government in small ways. Winston’s first act of rebellion is
buying and writing in a diary. This act is known as a thought crime
and is punishable by death. A thought crime is any bad thought
against the government of Oceania. Winston commits many thought
crimes and becomes paranoid about being caught, which he knows is
inevitable (Greenblast 113). He becomes paranoid because he is
followed by a young woman who is actively involved in many
community groups. Winston is obsessed with the past, a time before
Oceania was under strict dictatorship. He goes into an antique shop
and buys a shell covered in glass which is another crime punishable
by death. He sees the same woman following him. Many thoughts race
through his mind “I wanted to rape you and then murder you
afterwards. Two weeks ago I thought seriously of smashing your head
in with a cobblestone. If you really want to know, I imagined that
you had something to do with the Thought Police” (Orwell 101). The
girl who was following him slipped him a note while at work. The
note said “I love you”(90). They make plans to meet each other and
carry on an illegal love affair. This love affair is another
rebellion against the government. It goes on for some time. Winston
rents a room where he and Julia can be secluded from the outside
world. They meet a man named O’Brien who indicates that he is
another revolutionary. Winston and Julia go to his house to meet
with him. O’Brien gives than a seditious book to read. Soon after
that, they are caught by the Thought Police and never see each
other again. O’Brien, becomes Winston’s rehabilitator and torturer
for the next 9 months. O’Brien tortures Winston in stages. The
first two stages are to force the party’s beliefs on him then learn
and understand what is expected of him. In the third stage, Winston
is made to face what he secretly fears most, rats eating his face.
After being completely rehabilitated by O’Brien, Winston now loves
the establishment and the government. He is set free. Big Brother
is the figurehead of a government that has total control. The Big
Brother regime uses propaganda and puts fear in its citizens to
keep the general population in line. “Big Brother is watching
you”(Orwell 5) is just one example of many party slogans that puts
fear in its citizens. Big Brother uses various ways to catch people
guilty of bad thoughts “In the world of 1984 the tyrant Big Brother
does employ a vast army of informers called thought police, who
watch every citizen at all times for the least signs of criminal
deviation which may consist simply of unorthodox thoughts”(112).
Winston Smith represents Orwell’s view on totalitarianism. Winston
rebels against the government of Oceania by starting a diary and
constantly having bad thoughts against the government. “Winston
knows that he is doomed from the moment he has his first heretical
thought. The tensions of the novel concerns how long he can stay
alive and whether it is possible for Winston to die without
mentally betraying his rebellion” (Greenblast 115). Winston starts
writing in a diary for two reasons. The first is that he wants to
be able to remember the daily occurrences in the world. In 1984,
the memory of individuals, is effectively manipulated, programmed,
and controlled from the outside by the party (Kolakowski 127).
People don’t know what they are consciously remembering and what is
told to them. “The party had invented airplanes” (Orwell 127) is
just one example of the party’s propaganda and false statements
that change every day. The other reason for the diary is so that
people in the future will be able to read what went on during
Winston’s time and to tell them about his daily reflections on his
feelings about the party. These are the same reasons why Orwell
wrote 1984. He wanted to expose a communist country (the Soviet
Union). The specific political purpose that had aro used Orwell’s
sense of urgency was his desire to explode the myth of the Soviet
Union as the paradigm of the socialist state. He also wanted to
expose the dangers of totalitarianism, which the devaluation of
objective truth, and the systematic manipulation of the common
people through propaganda (”George Orwell”). O’Brien is an
informant to Big Brother. He is not who he seems to be. He appears
to Winston as a fellow conspirator, but actually becomes Winston’s
torturer and rehabilitator. O’Brien and the party can’t tolerate
Winston’s betrayal of the government. O’Brien tells his victim: You
are a flaw in the pattern, Winston. You are a stain that must be
wiped out…It is intolerable that an erroneous thought should exist
anywhere in the world, however secret and powerless it may be
(”George Orwell”). In fact, the party can’t comprehend his
disbelief and must change his thoughts through torture and
brainwash. “You will be hollow. We shall squeeze you empty and then
we shall fill you with ourselves” (Orwell 200). O’Brien represents
the core of communist or totalitarian rule, making the victims
suffer by using brainwashing to control them. O’Brien also tells
Winston what he should feel about Big Brother when Winston is at
his lowest point mentally and physically. O’Brien’s speeches to the
broken Winston Smith in the Thought Polices’ torture chamber
represents for Orwell the core of our century’s political
hideousness. Although O’Brien says that power seeks power and needs
no ideological excuse. he does in fact explain to his victim what
this power is (”George Orwell”). Julia is considered a sexual
deviant in the oppressed world of 1984. In a normal world sex is
free, in 1984 it’s a forbidden act only allowed for reproduction
purposes to keep the party’s numbers constant. Julia has been
sexually active since her teenage years. “She had had her first
love affair when she was sixteen, with a party member of sixty”
(Orwell 109). Love and sex is not allowed in this totalitarian
state so Julia has to look as pure as possible so that she does not
show any guilt. “You thought I was a good party member, pure in
word and deed. Banners, processions, slogans, games, community
hikes all that stuff. And you [Winston] thought that if I had a
quarter of a chance I’d denounce you as a thought criminal and get
you killed off ” (101). The owner of the antique shop is another
example of someone appearing to be what he is not.
Orwell uses the
shop owner to illustrate a point. Orwell shows that no one can be
trusted in a totalitarian country. Someone who appears to be your
friend will actually turn you in and have you killed. The shop
owner appears to be an old widower who enjoys having conversations
with Winston Smith. Throughout the book it can be seen that looks
can be deceiving. He is actually a member of the Thought Police and
gets a good laugh when Winston and Julia getting caught. Now all he
can do is wait for his next victim to enter his store. The Ministry
of Truth is a place where history and facts–significant and
insignificant are rewritten to reflect the party’s utopian beliefs.
They thoroughly destroy the records of the past; they print up new,
up to-date editions of old newspapers and books; and they know
corrected versions will be replaced by another, re-corrected one.
Their goal is to make people forget everything- facts, words, dead
people, the names of places. How far they succeed in obliterating
the past is not fully established in Orwell’s description; clearly
they try hard and they score impressive results. The ideal of
complete oblivion may not have been reached, yet further progress
is to be expressed (Kolakowski 126). Winston and Julia are workers
at the Ministry of Truth. Winston gets more mentally involved in
his work than Julia. “Winston Smith and his fellows at the Ministry
of Truth spend their days rewriting the past: Most of the material
you were dealing with had no connection with anything in the real
world, not even the kind of connection that is contained in a
direct lie’” (”George Orwell”). Winston is not as strong mentally
as Julia. His work affects him more. The Ministry of Truth is like
a totalitarian country, because it has ways to scare its citizens.
People guilty of crimes are erased from having ever existed. “Your
name was removed from the registers, every record of your existence
was denied and then forgotten” (Orwell 19). Again people were taken
away without any rights. “…there was no trial no report of arrest”
(19). The actual purpose of the Ministry of Truth is to spread lies
and to have control over its citizens using memory erasing
techniques. “…the distinction between true and false in their usual
meaning has disappea red. This is the great cognitive triumph of
totalitarianism: it cannot be accused of lying any longer since it
has succeeded in abrogating the very idea of truth (Kolakowski
127). These same control techniques are used by totalitarian
nations that seek control over there citizens. The Ministry of
Truth is a complete contradiction of itself. A Ministry of Truth
should not change past occurrences or say people never existed. It
should exemplify the truth and not erase records of the existence
of people. The Ministry of Love is where all criminals are
tortured, rehabilitated, then set free or killed. As soon as
Winston is captured he knows he is going to the Ministry of Love.
The Ministry of Love was the really frightening one. There were no
windows in it at all. Winston had never been inside the Ministry of
Love, nor within half a kilometer of it. It was a place impossible
to enter except on offical business, and then only by penetrating
through a maze of barbed-wire entanglements, steel doors, and
hidden machine-gun nests. Even the streets leading up to its outer
barriers were roamed by gorilla-faced guards in black uniforms,
armed with jointed truncheons (Orwell 8). In a totalitarian state
something resembling a Ministry of Love is common place. It’s a
place where the government can inflict pain on its subjects for
crimes big and small. That is how totalitarian nations keep, power
over their citizens– by fear of pain. The name Ministry of Love is
a contradiction of itself. Its name shows a feeling of love and
warmth, but in actuality it’s the complete opposite. It’s a place
of hate and pain and is cold and dark. A better name for it would
be the Ministry of Hate. George Orwell lived during a time when
Europe was in a period of rebuilding after World War II. During
that time Soviets gained six nations as satellites. England was
helpless and had to worry about their own problems and had to watch
the Soviet Union take control of half of Germany. The leader of the
Soviet Union, Stalin, closely resembles Big Brother. They were both
larger than life figures in there respective countries. In the
Soviet Union you could easily have found large posters with
Stalin’s face on them. The same holds true in 1984; Big Brother’s
face is everywhere. A famous quote from 1984 is “Big Brother is
watching you” (Orwell 5). Meaning if his Thought Police don’t catch
you, his telescreens and hidden microphones would. In the Soviet
Union, Stalin’s K.G.B. sought criminals who plotted against the
government. In Stalin’s regime over 10 million people were killed.
In 1984 hundreds of criminals were killed daily. Another aspect of
the 1940’s were the new broadcast T.V.’s and mainframe computers.
The new technologies could be used for means of control. Orwell saw
communist countries using these technologies for control (”George
Orwell”). This is where Orwell’s idea of telescreens and hidden
microphones came from. Before World War II, Orwell had his worst
encounter with communists. While Orwell was in the Spanish Civil
War, he was running away from Soviet communists who were trying to
kill him. After that experience he got out of the army and became a
writer full time. “Another shock to Orwell was when the Nazi-Soviet
pact signaled the breakdown and the beginning of the mental and
emotional state out of which grew Animal Farm and 1984″(Greenblast
105). Orwell may of have extracted what he saw in his world while
writing but it was done to get people’s attention of problems in
the existing world. “Orwell’s primary purpose is to distort
disturbing conditions tendencies and habits of thought that he saw
existing in the world”(”George Orwell”). Orwell saw, the whole
world steadily moving toward a vast ruthless tyranny. He felt
nothing could stop it’s monstrous progress. 1984, in spite of its
setting in the future, is not primarily a utopian fantasy
prophesying what the world will be like in thirty or forty years
but a novel about what the world is like now (Greenblast 112).
Orwell always relates characters in his books to points of view and
real people. In Animal Farm every farm animal represents a person
in the Soviet Union. In 1984, Orwell represents his point of view
in Winston. He shows a totalitarian leader, in O’Brien and Big
Brother, while Julia is the desire and lust in every human being.
George Orwell had deep resentment against totalitarianism and what
it stood for. He saw the problem of totalitarianism in his existing
world. He also understood how the problem could fester and become
larger due to instability in Europe’s economy after World War II.
He purposely makes the story, 1984, unrealistic and blown out of
proportion to capture people’s attention and make them think maybe
it wouldn’t be unrealistic in the near future. With his deep
resentment toward totalitarianism it became the focal point of his
novels. George Orwell’s, novels were directed toward against
totalitarianism and for Socialism and what it stood for.
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