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    Power In 1984

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    In the novel 1984 by George Orwell, the society of Oceania is divided by social status into three separate groups, the Inner Party which has utmost governmental power, the Outer Party, the working class of Oceania, and the Proles, a lower class considered significantly inferior to the others. The Inner Party being the most powerful sect of society has complete and total control over the citizens of Oceania, exercising their power to limitless extents. In the process of seeking to exert total…

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    V for Vendetta helps the viewer understand the connection of power is used to control others. The director shows this connection by explaining how the power is used to take control over other people that are helpless. This is portrayed in the film by showing a concentration camp that has imprisoned; Immigrants, Political Opponents, Homosexual people along with Muslims and other people known as the undesirables. The United Kingdom is run by the Chancellor. The Chancellor, has innocent people…

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    In Oceania, peer pressure is a vital element of society. Big Brother determines who everyone's peers are by splitting citizens up into the Inner Party, Outer Party, and the Proles. Big Brother also forbids any interactions between members of different peer groups. We see this peer pressure throughout the novel. There is peer pressure related to Two Minutes Hate because technically, citizens are not required to partake in Two Minutes Hate. However, everyone is forced to partake in it due to an…

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    1984, written in 1947 by Eric Arthur Blair or better known as George Orwell, the novel is about a dystopian future where democracy has been removed and the government controls most aspects of life. Winston Smith, the main character in the novel, begins to grow suspicious of the government and slowly has a rebellion grow inside of him. Throughout the novel Winston grows angry towards the government and meets people who feel the same way. It is illegal to think bad about the government or show…

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    Originally coined in 1972 by psychologist Irving Janis, the term “groupthink” has its roots in 1984. The Encyclopedia of Applied Psychology defines the phenomenon as “a condition in which highly cohesive groups in ‘hot’ decision situations display excessive levels of concurrence seeking that suppress critical inquiry and result in faulty decision making” (Aldag). Janis chose the name groupthink due to Orwell’s “doublethink” in 1984, a similar condition marked by the simultaneous acceptance of…

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    George Orwell writes about many important issues in his book, 1984. He writes about a future government where many different problems are portrayed dramatically and obviously. The book is about a totalitarian government that has complete control over its citizens, and intrudes on people’s privacy, to the point where even thoughts aren’t safe. Not only do they invade their thoughts, but they also control them. The government brainwashes their citizens to get them to be unquestioningly loyal the…

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    The notion of the government being omnipotent alarms people of all ages, recalling Communist years, and various other occurrences of absolutism. George Orwell’s dystopian novel, 1984, encompasses a futuristic totalitarian state under the control of “Big Brother.” Warnings to the Western world delineating possible despotism, remain prominent throughout characters. The protagonist, Winston Smith, works at a propaganda department for the state, labeled the “Ministry of Truth,” where inopportune…

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    The Usage of Symbolism as a Mechanism for Social Control in 1984 and V for Vendetta Symbolic figureheads have, throughout history, been able to shape society by utilising their own image and what they represent. George Orwell’s 1984 and Alan Moore’s V for Vendetta both explore this idea in detail. Orwell paints a picture of a bleak dystopian future in 1984, wherein the government’s ruling party exercises totalitarian control and the populace is either brainwashed by the party, or shows…

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    Love and hate two different things yet they cannot exist without each other, it’s as if they were incorruptible together. As shown in George Orwell's 1984, the ideas of love and hate seem so distant in meaning as they are polar opposites, yet they can exist without each other. George Orwell's 1984 is a novel that shows the life and aspect of a totalitarian society. The people love “Big Brother”, their dicator that is infinite, and Big Brother influences them to hate Emmanuel Goldstein, the…

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    The ever-growing possibility of the panoptic design and totalitarianism ideologies are shown entirely within the pages of 1984 by George Orwell. The mind within, is a trap. Imagine living within the dystopian society of 1984, where thinking is wrong. Big Brother is the trigger that catches all those who question Big brother. There is only one way to survive in a world where ideas are commonly practiced and enforced is to become one with yourself. Which boils down and leaves but one choice, trust…

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