In a totalitarian society where love, compassion, and intimacy are not permitted- two people manage to find each other. In George Orwell’s novel 1984, Winston and Julia are an unlikely match who would likely be incompatible in a normal, “free”society. While they are united in their passionate hatred for their society’s government (known as “the party”), they are complete opposites in their vision to overthrow or rebellion of it. Winston has a different view on the party than other people, he works at the Ministry of Truth so he knows exactly what happened in the past before history gets rewritten.…
Julia and Mildred In more than one way Julia (1984) and Mildred (451) have much in common but is leveled out with the amount that contrasts. Julia, a lover in the night and Mildred, Guy’s wife who attempts to commit suicide. They both are tightrope walkers both have so much in differences that one might think that she would tip the walker but there are similarities that keep the walker even. Julia is the lover in the night, the only other one Winston can be sure hates the party as much as he does.…
You have not betrayed Julia’ “ Winston trusts O’Brien no matter what he has done to Winston. Chapter Four: Winston still loves Julia, even after all that has happened. “Julia! Julia!…
O’Brien asks Winston and Julia if they want to join the Brotherhood (a group of rebels that work against Big Brother) and if they are willing take all the risk just for the Brotherhood. At this point, Winston is still full of hope; hope to get his freedom back and live without the oppression of the government. However, it turns out that O’Brien had simply played with Winston, and reported everything that he did as a member of a Thoughtpolice, and arrested him and Julia. He tortures Winston and completely wipe out his emotions and thoughts in slow steps and fills it back with the love of Big Brother. In the process, Winston betrays Julia by asking O’Brien to torture her instead himself.…
(Page 109- 110) Winston continues to tenaciously think of ways that he could meet with Julia and rejects one idea after another, as if he is in a constant fight with…
She is not afraid of taking risks. She don’t care what the government is doing because she is not affected by it. She do whatever makes her happy. While Winston is too deep in focusing in the past, Julia is only focus on the future. The past doesn’t matter to her and it doesn’t bring joy to her life for finding out about the…
Although Kenny can be a snotbrain, he is one of the main reason why Julia grows the way she does in Linda Sue Park’s novel Project Mulberry. Relationships grow and change in cycles, and throughout this novel, Julia grows closer to the people in her life. She also learns what is important to her, but she could not have gotten there without help from little silkworms and her younger brother Kenny. The poem I wrote was about the relationship Julia and Kenny have. It was based on chapter sixteen because this is when their relationship really blossoms.…
For Winston, this is Julia, and for Ishmael, this is both Esther and Laura. Winston struggles in the beginning of the novel because he feels alone. He feels as though everyone believes the Party except him so he has no one to talk to about his opposition against the government without being turned into the thoughtpolice. After very few interactions with Julia, Winston receives a note from her that reads, “I love you” (IN-TEXT CITATIONS). Their relationship budds from this note, through secret meetings.…
I have seldom seen anyone come over to us so promptly. You would hardly recognize her if you saw her. All her rebelliousness, her deceit, her folly, her dirty-mindedness – everything has been burned out of her. It was a perfect conversion, a textbook case" (Orwell 259). Julia’s betrayal of Winston is demonstrative of the fragility of even the strongest loyalty; loyalty that she swore would never be swerved even under extreme…
Whether it is through a loving yet detrimental bond between two main characters, an explicit lie made by a supposed friend and Brotherhood member to Winston, or the ultimate self-inflicting factor, betrayal has a significant influence on the novel. A major relationship in which the majority of the novel’s plot is based around, is the relationship between Winston Smith and Julia. Not only is this relationship important in terms of the plot, it is very relevant in the idea of trust leading to betrayal. In their eyes, it is a way for the two to go against the Party in control of everyone, so an indestructible trust must be present.…
Mankind has always possessed two conflicting desires; the aspiration to fit in and the determination to stand out. These are two concurrent components of a complex system by which all human beings exist. But while these desires may clash with each other, an ideal life would be filled with an equal amount of both. These two forces are shown throughout George Orwell’s book, 1984. Winston violently hungers for Julia’s company because she is the only one that can understand him.…
Winston smith rebels against the party as he has a love affair with Julia, rents Mr.Charrington's, wants to join the brotherhood, and buys a paperweight. To begin, Julia and Winston's relationship are a form of "ownlife"(Orwell 82) which is a direct rebellion against the party. The “sex instinct [creates] a world of its own which [is] outside the Party's control and which therefore [has] to be destroyed if possible. ”(Orwell 132-133).Winston and Julia engage in a powerful political act that Winston considers to be a “blow struck against the Party” (Orwell 126). Therefore, for Winston and Julia, the act of having sex is an emotional release which helps them rebel against the Party.…
While in the Ministry of Love Winston is beaten and tortured but he stays strong however, once they bring out the rats Winston breaks almost instantly. They force the starving rats onto him. He feels them gnawing on him and crawling on his face. Winston confesses to everything, and is forced to conform to Big Brother. After he is released, Winston feels like he betrayed himself and Julia because they had plans together and he just gave in.…
Brought into the Ministry of Love, Winston is endures torture and mind control in effort to invert his mindset. He battles to resist O’Brien’s influence and maintain his individuality. Winston’s attempt and constant struggle to remain in control of his fate is evident through his relationship with Julia, his memories, and through his logic as O’Brien molds Winston, through manipulation, into the perfect citizen. Firstly, Winston, as he enters the Ministry of Love, is a prime example of a deviant citizen…
Published just four years apart, with 1984 in 1949 and Fahrenheit 451 in 1953, Ray Bradbury and George Orwell shared many ideas about how a dystopian society may function. Fahrenheit 451 and 1984 show a number of similarities and some differences based on Orwell and Bradbury’s ideas, which the reader can easily point out while reading each novel. Over 50 years later, one may observe the two side-by-side and identify the parallels between them, including everything from character development to plot structure. Some even find it hard to believe that Bradbury’s Fahrenheit 451, published years after 1984, took no inspiration from Orwell. Each book contains a daring protagonist, an equally daring counterpart, an oppressive government, and an…