"Compare contrast orwells 1984 atwoods handmaids" Essays and Research Papers

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    English – comparing 1984 & The Handmaid’s Tale. In The Handmaid’s Tale Margaret Atwood puts across the sense of mystery‚ things that were once there but are no more. She talks about ‘the pungent smell of sweat‚ shot through with the sweet smell of chewing gum and perfume’ which came from the girls who once watched the basketball matches that were ‘formally played there’. In the first section of this book we get the feeling that the character is quite lost‚ lost in what once was and not in the

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    2013 Julia vs. Winston in 1984 by George Orwell The Modern Period of British literature was often written about one person trying to find comfort and satisfaction in a world that has lost its values and traditions. Writers of this time would often show the characters dealing with societal struggles and their ways of overcoming them. George Orwell is one author of this era who shows characters facing and dealing with a society that no longer has values. Orwell’s 1984 is set in a totalitarian society

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    In 1984Orwell predicted that the government would have tele-screens. Telescreens are half a television and half a security camera. The security cameras allow the state to monitor everything the citizens are doing and making sure they don’t commit any thought

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    technologies that has the potential to change our society like 1984. For example‚ the police now have a device that can read license plates and check if a car stolen or uninsured. Humans know that the National Security Agency can observe what we do online and Google searches. It also seems that almost every stores we would go to would always ask for our phone number and ZIP code as part of any transactions. If you have read the novel‚ 1984‚ we can see the many similar qualities that our world and Orwell’s

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    For centuries‚ people have been trying to fit everything in our world into categories. By creating a hierarchy with these categories‚ people can put their favorite things into higher categories to prove that they are better than other work in that field. Literature‚ with a definition that is different for everyone‚ is normally kept in the category of well-done written work. This means that your grocery list or books that fall short of the standard of greatness necessary are not considered to be in

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    Handmaids Tale and 1984

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    strong bond of a team‚ club or friendship. Life without a family seems nearly unmanageable. One would be lonely‚ helpless‚ depressed‚ gloomy; the list continues. Would one be able to function? In the novels‚ The Handmaid’s Tale by Margaret Atwood and 1984 by George Orwell‚ society is portrayed particularly different than life today. When a self-dependent individual comes in contact with the manipulative power of a dystopian society in a situation where they have no one it results in total submission.

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    everyone plays a role. Just like in real life‚ stories have small characters‚ that make big differences. Every character in a story has a reason to be there. Without them‚ important parts of the plot would not be illustrated. We see this in the novel‚ 1984‚ with the characters Julia‚ O’Brien‚ and Parsons. While all different‚ they also have similarities. Someone who plays a large role in Winston’s life‚ is Julia. Julia’s slim‚ young figure causes Winston to begin making a lot of risky‚ secret trips

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    for granted—which our nation’s regime has created. North Korea and Oceania—a fictional country in the book‚ 1984 by George Orwell—are both irreconcilable countries compared to America‚ and are each a totalitarian society. Both nations have extremely strict rules which many Americans would find highly concerning and may be absurd. A dystopian country‚ Oceania --in George Orwell’s book 1984-- portrays a similar society to North Korea’s which entails an overpowering regime like structure that

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    The Handmaid’s Tale written by Margaret Atwood and Push written by Sapphire are two novels narrated by two young adult women. Both stories take readers along the journey to find their happiness‚ after being mistreated and abandoned by others. The novels bring two completely different experiences‚ but very similar perspectives on their lives. Even though both novels are written in different eras and regions on the world‚ the similar life experiences for these two young women are related. The feeling

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    1984 by George Orwell

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    Nineteen Eighty-Four is a novel by George Orwell published in 1949. It is a dystopian andsatirical novel set in Oceania‚ where society is tyrannized by The Party and its totalitarianideology.[1] The Oceanian province of Airstrip One is a world of perpetual war‚ omnipresent government surveillance‚ and public mind control‚ dictated by a political systemeuphemistically named English Socialism (Ingsoc) under the control of a privileged Inner Party elite that persecutes all individualism and independent

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