"Nineteen eightyfour" Essays and Research Papers

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    I am slow. Here is it. There must be a lot of grammar and vacabulary problems and a lot of misueses. I am poor at that. Welcome for any comments~ To write comments on Nineteen Eighty-four and Brave New World is difficult but intriguing‚ as there are so many differences as well as similarities between the two books. Nineteen Eighty-four describes a world full of hatred‚ horror and oppression‚ while Brave New World is about a world filled with love‚ enjoyment and desire. The two books are like

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    can be dangerous to totalitarian control. The critical essay “George Orwell and the Mad World: The Anti-Universe of 1984” by Ralph A. Ranald discusses the theme of controlled madness and of a reverse society in George Orwell’s Nineteen Eighty-Four. Ranald argues that Nineteen Eighty-Four is about “…religion reversed‚ law and government reversed‚ and above all‚ language reversed: not simply corrupted‚ but reversed” (Ranald 251). He refers to Winston as an “antihero” (Ranald 250)‚ and “implies the ability

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    1984 Totalitarianism Essay

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    longer be imaginative. Orwell saw the dangers of living under totalitarian government‚ which is why he wrote Nineteen Eighty-four. George Orwell writes Nineteen Eighty-four in the year 1949 because he feared the future world would rule under totalitarianism. He warns society through Nineteen Eighty-four’s characters‚ themes‚ and control the Party has on its individuals. The characters in Nineteen Eighty-four are created to show its readers that totalitarianism can again become a serious threat and should

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    are acting as a warning to mankind and - in a world rife with political change - we would do well to heed their advice. Possibly the most powerful warnings ever issued about the danger of totalitarian governments can be found in George Orwell’s Nineteen Eighty-Four where the protagonist – Winston – despises the forced oppression of the Party on the otherwise oblivious citizens of Oceania‚ yet‚ by the climax of the novel Winston is punished for his disloyalty to Big Brother and is obliged to become

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    Module A: Elective 2 Sample Response: Metropolis and Nineteen Eighty-Four Response by: Cameron Malcher The question (adapted from 2014 HSC) Rebellion and revolution are ideas which connect Metropolis and Nineteen Eighty-Four. How do these two texts from different contexts reflect changing perspectives on this idea? What it requires Both texts are connected by an exploration of rebellion and revolution that have direct relevance to the composers and their audiences. Compare and contrast the similarities

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    Gattaca Comparison

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    George Orwell’s Nineteen-Eighty Four and Andrew Niccol’s Gattaca share similar visions of the future. Nineteen eighty four is a science-fiction novel written by Orwell in 1949 and illustrates the perception of the impending future as to what he anticipated‚ similarly the 1997 science-fiction film Gattaca is director Niccol’s apparition of the future. The texts of Nineteen-eighty four and Gattaca contrast due to their different setting and situations. The composers display their values

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    Nineteen Eighty-Four was written by a major contributor to anticommunist literature around the World War II period‚ and is one of the greatest stories of an anti-utopian society ever. Nineteen Eighty-Four was not written solely as an entertaining piece of literature or as a dream of what the future could be like‚ it was written as a warning of what could happen as a result of communism and totalitarianism. This was not necessarily a widely popular vision of the future at the time of publication‚

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    1984 vs. Animal Farm In both novels Nineteen Eighty-Four and Animal Farm there are many similarities. Three main topics‚ which will be discussed in this essay‚ are: control‚ isolation‚ and rebellion. The governing powers in each society of the two novels use control and isolation as tools for suppressing rebellion to ensure their reign of the social authority for future years to come. In Nineteen Eighty-Four‚ the government‚ also known as "the Party"‚ controls the society Winston lives in. This

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    1984-Influences of War The novel Nineteen Eighty-Four by George Orwell was greatly shaped by the author’s experience in preparatory school‚ and the events of the Spanish war‚ and World War II‚ that took place throughout his lifetime. Orwell first became aware of class distinctions while attending preparatory school in Sussex where he was teased because he did not come from a wealthy family. This cruel experience sensitized him to social snobbery. In his novel Nineteen Eighty-Four‚ he writes about three

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    St thomas high school | Control in George Orwell’s Nineteen Eighty-Four | | | Olivia Magwood | 2/16/2010 | In many oligarchies‚ where the power of a society rests in the hands of a small elite group‚ the government claims absolute power and control over the population. Such is the case in George Orwell’s Nineteen Eighty-Four‚ where the Party maintains control over Oceania and its people. The Party implements various tactics to influence the population‚ specifically through the control

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