Animosity And Disobedience Toward The Party In George Orwell's 1984

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“You had to live- did live, from habit that became instinct- in assumption that every sound you made was overheard, and except in darkness, every moment scrutinized” (Orwell 3). Winston Smith lived in a society where every individual’s thoughts and actions were being watched by the Party. If one did have thoughts or actions defying the Party they would vanish and cease to exist in the past, present, and future. The Party had control over everything and everyone. Winston’s animosity towards the Party allows him to overcome the difficulty of expressing his thoughts through determination. Animosity and determination caused Winston to make irrational and paranoid psychological thoughts to accommodate his feelings toward the Party, which then caused …show more content…
By the glance between O’Brien and Winston, Winston thought that O’Brien was also against the Party. However, after Winston revealed all his disobedience towards the Party O’Brien turned Winston in into the Thought Police. Winston thought that he could trust O’Brien but O’Brien ended up being a part of the Party and he tortured Winston. However, Winston did not see O’Brien as the person who was torturing him for his lack of loyalty towards the Party but Winston saw O’Brien as the person who stopped all his pain. Even after O’Brien turned Winston into the Thought Police and tortured Winston, Winston still thought of O’Brien more as a friend than foe, “O’Brien was his protector, that the pain was something that came from the outside, from some other source, and that it was O’Brien who would save him from it” (Orwell 250). Winston also made an ill judgment in character when he thought that Julia was a spy. Winston was so sure that Julia was a spy that he contemplated about smashing her head with a rock. However, Winston finds out that Julia is not a spy, she merely just loves him. The girl that Winston hated and even contemplated on killing he ended up having a relationship with. Winston and Julia’s relationship is not based off of true love or physical attraction; it is based off of animosity towards the Party and going against what the Party wanted, “ ‘You like doing this? I don’t mean simply me; I mean the thing itself?’ ‘I adore it’” (Orwell 125). Winston Smith yearned for someone to share a passion in hating the party that he pursued the relationship with people that put him in dangerous situations and with people who did not care for him as an individual but related to his animosity towards the

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