‘Discuss how the citizens of Oceania are controlled and manipulated by the Party in Nineteen Eighty-Four’…
Cellphones and technology have become a major part of todays’ society. A totalitarian government is centralized and has total control over its people. On the other hand a democratic government makes major decisions through majority vote. In George Orwell’s novel 1984, Winston’s perspective depicts his life living in Oceania under a totalitarian. In this age of cell phones and mobile devices equipped with recording capabilities, when anyone says or does could wind up on the “internet” within minutes, showing similar tactics as Big Brother, but not entirely. Oceania’s totalitarian government is different from contemporary Canada by eliminating independent rights, creating psychological control and allowing no freedom of any sort.…
Prompt 2005 B: One of the strongest human drives seems to be a desire for power. Write an essay in which you discuss how a character in a novel or a drama struggles to free himself or herself from the power of others or seeks to gain power over others. Be sure to demonstrate in your essay how the author uses this power struggle to enhance the meaning of the work.…
“We can't be confined to one way of thinking, and that terrifies our leaders. It means we can't be controlled. And it means that no matter what they do, we will always cause trouble for them.” (Roth, 2012) Victoria Roth describes the way people act in a society, individuals are different from one another, and therefore have different beliefs, ideas, and thoughts. When a ruler comes into power, he wants to make the whole community think as he does, but the real problem comes when he abuses of his power to take control. In this way totalitarian governments and rulers have arose, and have intended to influence in the society to achieve their goals. A totalitarian leader controls the behavior and actions of its people in order to become powerful. In the novels, Brave New World by Aldous Huxley and 1984 by George Orwell, two futuristic dystopias are depicted. Both of them show totalitarian rule, where liberty has been deprived by different means of control. In Brave New World, the control of society is maintained through a peaceful way that consists in convincing people of loving their lack freedom. On the other side, in 1984, control is upheld by surveillance, the restriction of information, and torture. The absolute power of a totalitarian state leads to a total control of the society, causing it to be vapid, ignorant and oppressed.…
3. What kind of invasion of privacy exist in Oceania? The two-way telescreen, the Police Patrol swooping down in helicopters to peer in people’s windows, the constant fear of being targeted as an enemy by the Thought Police, the posters of Big Brother with reminders the “Big Brother is Watching You.”…
Oceania serves as an example of what's it would be to live where the basic freedoms we would hardly notice,do not exist. You would live in cold desolate world, unable to express any your inner thoughts, or have any meaningful interaction with anyone else. You would simply exist for the mere sake of existence, ultimately without any purpose except for what the party decides. 1984 serves as a warning as to what terrors a totalitarian form of government may…
Throughout Chapter 1 of 1984, the reader is exposed to the many kinds of manipulation that the government uses to control the people of Oceania. The Party uses numerous examples of verbal and dramatic irony as part of its campaign to exercise its dominance over the people and control their daily actions.…
1984 is a society characterized by human misery. Truth is an actual state of matter, of actual existence, an obvious or accepted fact. A lie is a false statement made with deliberate intent to deceive. Oceania is a living paradox where every lie is a truth and therefore every truth a lie. In 1984 George Orwell uses didactic and lucid language to make sure the responder can interpret it in no other way than what he intended. “The past was erased, the erasure forgotten, the lie became truth” By controlling the present, the Party is able to manipulate the past. And in controlling the past, the Party can justify all of its actions in the present.…
In the novel 1984, George Orwell demonstrates to the people of the future how one governing body can manage to manipulate a whole country such as Oceania. Throughout our past we have seen totalitarian governments take absolute control over their countries. Some examples of leaders of countries that have demonstrated a totalitarian regime are Hitler and Stalin in World War II. Totalitarianism is a manipulative dictatorship that strives to limit the freedoms, abolish individuality, and brainwash its citizens (dictionary.com). In the totalitarian society of Oceania, people are controlled in every possible way. Rhetoric and language are constantly used by Big Brother, the figurehead leader, to maintain power over the society. Newspeak uses meaningless words to keep the thought of rebellion and freedom out of peoples’ minds. Doublethink encourages people to hold two contradictory ideas at once, accepting them both as truth. The Ministry of Truth is devoted to changing past history to conform with current government goals. The author leads us to recognize that all too often, instances of similar attempts at mind control by mass media occur in today's real world. (Johnson, Hayden)…
A totalitarian government must be simultaneously admired and feared by its citizens in order to maintain absolute control. Oceania’s Inner Party in George Orwell’s 1984 takes extreme measures, such as putting its people through physical and mental torture, to ensure that they will always remain in power. Citizens are robbed of any personal rights and freedoms, bringing about their suffering and the Party’s success. Inequality between the social classes as well as unreasonable punishment for crime keeps the citizens in line and the Party in…
“Power is in tearing human minds to pieces and putting them together again in new shapes of your own choosing” (Orwell 336). The use of propaganda, destruction of language, rewriting of history, and brainwashing of the population are some of the ways a government may exercise their authority over the inhabitants. In the novel 1984, by George Orwell this is exactly how the totalitarian government uses its influence over its citizens. The extreme power and control the Party has over the population in the novel is parallel to that of Nazi Germany during World War II which can be seen in “Propaganda Techniques Within Nazi Germany” by Julius Yourman. One major technique of manipulation seen in 1984 was the deterioration of language, literature,…
In the book 1984, George Orwell the use of information technology shares some similarities and differences to the technology in United States today. Oceania and United States both share the fact that they keep track of this information to keep the citizens of their country relaxed about the state of their country. In Oceania the use of information technology is primarily used to keep The Party in power so no citizen’s rebel. In the United States today information technology is used to keep the country safe from other countries and the citizens of the United States who wish to do harm to the country. In Oceania the use of information technology is used to keep The Party in power of Oceania.…
The word totalitarian is defined as “exercising control over the freedom, will, or thought of others” (Dictionary.com). The totalitarian society of Oceania does just that, as the state is controlled by the Party, which influences every aspect of people’s lives and manipulates people to enhance their own sense of power. It takes a great deal of work to be able to mold people like clay and use them for your own benefit, but the Party has mastered the art of keeping people under their command and eliminating any seed of rebellion. By controlling very natural urges and basic rights, they are able to drastically affect how people act and think in their society. In George Orwell's 1984, the oppressive Party is able to retain control over the citizens…
To start, the world as the citizens of Oceania know it in 1984 revolves around their major leader, Big Brother. Big Brother and the Party demand utter and complete devotion from their citizens. Big Brother is the face of Oceania, and he is watching you. This figurehead demands loyalty and love for him and ONLY him. There is more love for him than even your own kids. 1984 illustrates the worship citizens of Oceania have towards Big Brother through public affairs. Specifically, Oceania’s Two Minutes Hate. “The Two…
An example of a truly totalitarian state would be Stalin’s Russia; a stark contrast to the feeble attempts at totalitarianism in…