Winston is a fatalistic character, making comments such as “we are the dead” (135), but his willingness to rebel, despite his knowledge that capture is inevitable, adds optimism to his situation. He follows this statement by saying “our only true life is in the future,” illustrating that the degree of oppression in their society makes it so that they are not truly living, providing a source of motivation for Winston to rebel. For him, death becomes a welcome idea as long as he has the opportunity to truly live as himself, if only for a short period of time. Orwell chose the last name “Smith” for his protagonist to portray Winston as an “everyman” because it is the most common English surname, meaning there is nothing extraordinarily special about him. Therefore, having thoughts that differ from the Party does not make him special and others must have similar beliefs. Orwell proves this once again when he reveals that Julia has been with men “scores of times...always with Party members” (125). This offers hope as others are willing to act on their dissent towards the Party, or simply have no misgivings when it comes to not abiding by their laws. Winston and Julia are both broken by the Party, suggesting that there is a lack of hope in the society. However, hope simply must come from others who have yet to express their dissent of Party ideals. Also, perhaps Winston, deep-down, has not succumb to the Party’s indoctrination, but simply cannot forgive himself for betraying Julia and has lost his motivation for rebellion. Winston rebels so that he can live, but in the final chapters he expresses a desire to die. This sentiment is driven by his regret and complete loss of self-esteem which prevent him from being able to continue fighting, but it cannot be assumed that he has lost his belief that rebellion is necessary. Hints of his own individuality…
The novel's main character, Winston Smith, lives as a low-ranking member of the ruling Party in London. The Party controls all aspects of daily life and attempts to control people’s thoughts by enforcing an invented language called Newspeak, in which all words relating to political rebellion have been eliminated and any rebellious thoughts (labeled Thoughtcrime) are illegal. The symbolism used, including the omnipresent Party Leader (Big Brother), the political slogans, the squalor of the working class, and even Winston's job in the Ministry of Truth where he arbitrarily alters political records to fit the needs of the Party reinforces the State’s total suppression of free thought, sex, and any expression of individuality. His illegal affair with Julia eventually leads to his arrest, torture, and mental reconditioning by the…
In the beginning Winston goes against the law and secretly buys a journal to write in, even though if he is caught he will be taken away forever. He would have to face Big Brother, but Winston was willing to take the chance. Many times he reads throughout the novel “ War is Peace, Freedom is Slavery, Ignorance is Strength”. Which is the official saying of the Party. While attempting to write in the journal Winston found himself only being able to write “Down with Big Brother” repeatedly. He always found himself confused on what to do but always believed that he would never conform into one of them!…
Winston has a firm belief that the totalitarian government, the Party, is corrupt and cruel toward the people. A totalitarian government is a government that attempts to control all aspects of its citizen’s lives. However, by the end of the story, the Party is able to alter Winston’s thoughts toward them. Before his torture at the Ministry of Love, Winston recalls faint memories about his childhood and other memories about a rebellion against the Party. However, now, Winston feels as if he is “troubled by false memories occasionally” (Orwell 298). The memories of a rebellion against the Party come across as irrelevant to Winston, when before, it is all he thought about. At the Chestnut Tree Café, Winston acknowledges that “he had won the victory over himself. He loved Big Brother” (Orwell 298). In other words, Winston accepts the ways and the rules of the party, and decides to continue on with his life, disremembering all of his past. Winston cannot be defined as a hero because of how he chooses to go along with the totalitarian government as opposed to standing up for what he thinks is…
Winston Smith does not realize it but longs for love and compassion. He is in a marriage that is assigned to him. He does not really love his wife Katherine. When she divorces him he notices that he needs someone to love and to take care of. This feeling lead to Winston's Dreams of his mother and how she loved and nurtured his sister he can't remember. He often dreams of this woman he is infatuated with. All the poor man is looking for is love and compassion, but in his society all he will get is a controlled relationship and room 101. This makes Winston hate Big Brother and the party. Big Brother is the face of the party. Winston is not even sure if he is real or not but he for sure does not like…
In the beginning of the book Winston Smith is an average man of his time that goes to work and, lives in a house with a telescreen, and can only do what Big Brother allows him to do. It is evident that Winston has suspicion toward Big Brother and the government. Orwell reveals Winston’s feelings towards Big Brother while he is in his workplace in the Ministry of Truth. “His pen had slid voluptuously over the smooth paper, printing in large neat capitals DOWN WITH BIG BROTHER…. Over and over again filling half a page.” (19). This shows that Winston wants the government to be overthrown right away, and to write something like this in his workplace is a big risk , but he does it anyway. Winston is trying to find out the truth behind Big Brother and the government. After this event Winston begins to commit more though crime to rebel against the government and find the truth. He commits thought crime by writing in a diary which he hopes one day will be read by others that feel the same way. He is hoping for more people to feel the same way so they can join together and take down the government. He has cryptic encounters with a man that works with him, O’Brien a member of the inner party. “We want to join it (Brotherhood) and work for it. We are enemies of the Party. We are thought criminals.” (140) This is said by Winston to O’Brien when they are discussing the Brotherhood and the…
Readers are introduced to Winston Smith, his living situation which although called Victory Mansion is not lavish; it is a run-down apartment complex. Readers are also introduced to Big Brother, the government’s authority figure and figurehead for the Party. The telescreen always watches its Party Members, looking for traitors among them. Winston brings out a journal, out of view of the telescreen, because it is considered an act of rebellion against the Party. He writes about the films the Party makes, the dark-haired girl from work and O’Brien, someone he believes is against the Party. Winston commits thoughtcrime at the end of the chapter by writing DOWN WITH BIG BROTHER in the journal. Winston believes the Thought Police will knock at his door, but it turns out to be Mrs. Parsons, his neighbor. Winston helps her with the Parsons’ plumbing and her children accuse him of thoughtcrime. Her children are upset that they couldn’t go see the public hanging. He goes back to his apartment and hides the journal. Winston then dreams of his mother and a sinking ship that he feels responsible for. He then dreams of a Utopia free from the Party where he is with the dark-haired girl from work. He wakes up to a whistle for the “Physical Jerks”, the Party’s regulated physical exercise. Winston is yelled at from the telescreen by the exercise manager. After the “Physical Jerks” Winston goes to work at the Ministry of Truth where he updates Big Brother’s orders and Party Records so what Big Brother says is always true. He makes up a story about a fictional person, Comrade Ogilvy, as a ideal Party Man who died. Winston then meets up with Syme, another Party member who revises the Newspeak dictionary. Syme talks about the aime of Newspeak is to erase words. Winston knows the Syme will be vaporized because he is too intelligent. Parsons, Winston’s neighbor, visits Winston to get their apartment’s dues. Parsons laughs about how his…
The story is told by a man with the name of Winston Churchill. He is part of a ruling party in London, which is in the nation of Oceania. Winston lives in a society where everything he does he is watched by the party. It’s like they stalk him watching him through telescreens at his home or even on the street. He is always being watched by what by a leader he sees and others see as Big Brother. In his this world the government controls every aspect of his life as well as others. They control both the language and history of the people who live in Oceania. No one can do anything unless the government agrees to let them to. It is looked at as a crime to even plot to go against the government. Anyone who looks suspicious of looking to overthrow the government they get the leisure of going to prison for years. Its looked at as murdering someone in today’s society. The so called Party is even trying to force a language upon the people called Newspeak. This tries to prevent political rebellion by eliminating all words related to it. In the book Winston lost the girl he loved, Julia. He tried to fight the government and make a change in the society but in the end he was brain-washed. He was turned into pretty much a walking zombie doing exactly what they asked. He was put in jail called the Ministry of Love. This was due to the help of his so called friend, O’Brien, who was a part of the Big Brother Party. While being in jail he is tortured by his worse fear which is happens to be rats.…
Mr. Orwell created Winston as a simple and nearly background character. Nothing really stands out about him and which makes the mind wonder and be drawn towards him. He seems like a normal guy but is really hiding something grand. He is going against the government and Big Brother in one of the smallest ways but it will make a huge difference in the long run. I know it doesn’t seem so now, but Winston is going to change the world with what he is doing. As he sits in his indent writing secrets and his true feelings, something is building up inside of him that will be released very soon and send the world into a tumble.…
George Orwell created a dystopian future in his novel 1984. Winston Smith is an outer party member who works in the records department in the Ministry of Truth. His job is to rewrite the past so it is in accordance with the present. Winston is not like the others in Oceania. He secretly hates Big Brother and The Party. Winston has a love affair with another outer party member named Julia. Winston and Julia elope to a room above an old antique shop owned by Mr. Charrington. O’Brien, an inner party member, senses Winston’s discontent for the The Party and invites him to his home to become a part of “The Brotherhood” an underground organization with the intent of bringing down Big Brother. One day while Winston and Julia are in the room above the antique shop the “Thought Police” charge into the room and arrest Winston and Julia for being “thought criminals”. Winston is taken to the Ministry of Love to be interrogated. While there Winston discovers that O’Brien is actually a supporter of The Party and set Winston up. While in the Ministry of Love O’Brien explains he will make Winston “love Big Brother” which he eventually does. In the novel 1984 George Orwell correctly foresaw public surveillance, and people willingly giving up their right to privacy out of fear. Orwell incorrectly predicted the government trying to break the ties people have with their families and each other, and trying to abolish the act of sex.…
In 1984, George Orwell, English novelist, delivers a dystopian fiction novel about the future possible world of 1984. Orwell creates the character, Winston Smith, the protagonist of the novel. Winston Smith is solely against the party and is curious as to where his rebellion against the party will lead him. While still attending hate week, working for the party, and being under surveillance 24/7, Smith attempts to figure out his way to the Brotherhood. Along with Smith’s hate for the party, Orwell uses rhetorical devices such as tone and imagery to develop Winston’s character.…
In the first part of the book Winston Smith is introduced as a party member who has a slightly rebellious side. His world is full of telescreens, hidden microphones, and spies that show the government’s distrust of its citizens. They cannot say, do, or even think anything against the head political figure, Big Brother. The citizens of Oceania must stay on their toes at all times, even when in their own house’s. Children are hailed as “Child Hero’s” when they betray their parents and turn them in for thought crime. Winston lives in a world in which parents must fear the betrayal of their own children. Oceania is a society that promotes the division of families through fear.…
When a person’s peace of mind is compromised, so is their sanity. The early parts of the novel display the thoughts of Winston as he commits the epitome of thoughtcrime, writing “DOWN WITH BIG BROTHER”, repeatedly. This series of events being placed in the beginning of the novel throws the reader right into the oppressive government that is The Party, and shows the reader what they are all about. Rebellions are started by those who feel oppressed by their superiors, people who feel like they have no way out unless they fight their way out, start a revolution. Winston’s feelings of oppression are transferred into intense desires to rebel against The Party, specifically wanting to break one of their cardinal rules, no sexual encounters with anyone. He meets a fellow member of The Party who feels an urge to rebel, it is a selfish urge however as she only enjoys the personal thrill. Her name is Julia, and she has an affair with Winston to rebel against The Party, the two fall in love. This proves how quickly rebellious thoughts can turn into life changing scenarios, with Winston and Julia both committing crimes that can change their lives…
There is only so much perpetual confinement a man can take. Often I wonder how much longer I’ll be able to stand it. The delusion that I could possibly still be an individual seized my absent mind. Porcelain white walls delineate me. No windows, no chance in hell to escape.…
The protagonist of this story is Winston Smith, who works at the Ministry of Truth as a sort of professional history revisionist. His job is to rectify newspaper articles and documents in which Big Brother made predictions or statements that did not agree with the actual outcome of events; in other words, to maintain the public illusion that the Party is perfect. Unhappy with his state of being, Winston would like to overthrow the Party but is powerless to do so. So he teams up with his love interest Julia who is another Party worker. He also collaborates with a high-ranking Party official named O'Brien, who reveals himself as a secret member of a society called The Brotherhood who are planning to destroy the Party. O'Brien gives Winston a book explaining the ideals and motivations of the Party: The upper classes (the highest Party members) need to retain their economic status. Therefore, it is important to control the minds and bodies of the lower classes, and wars are waged constantly only so that money will be spent on the production of…