1984 Winston Smith is a disillusioned Outer Party member in Oceania‚ in the year 1984‚ and he begins to question the validity of the Party and its policies‚ like no sex for joy‚ only for procreation and the ever-present telescreen‚ which monitors his apartment all day. He feels the Party is restrictive and overriding free thought and will which is what Winston feels is essential to being human‚ but he is fearful of the Thought Police who patrol people ’s very thoughts and make people "disappear"
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have to face and overcome. In Thomas C. Foster’s book‚ How to Read Literature like a Professor: A Lively and Entertaining Guide to Reading Between the Lines‚ he states‚ “ people expect them (symbols) to mean something. Not just any something‚ but one something in particular” (104). That means that we want symbols to mean in thing like in Beowulf the monster Grendel could symbolize something. Grendel could be the very first major battle the a person faces‚ like Beowulf did in the book. This battle could
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chivalry he is showing as well. I imagine her talking about the man’s courage in a very stern tone of voice. The last element that I noticed is symbolism and I think there were a few symbols. She says that “the sky filled with crows he held her up.” I think that the crows are symbolizing heaven. The other symbol I noticed is the stone steps‚ and to me this
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fascists may get into power; and Orwell has written this book to try and make the reader realize how much power the fascists have and how extreme the situation may get. An example of the technology that the fascists could have used would have been the telescreens‚ which allows them to view the lives of every person at all times. In part one‚ Orwell uses form to create a dystopian future by describing the protagonist‚ Winston Smith‚ with ‘...his pen slid voluptuously over the smooth paper‚ printing his
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and population. The People’s Republic of China went through a drastic change in culture and as a nation under a communist government. The methods that this government had used under Mao Zedong’s direction‚ can also be seen used by the government in ‘1984’‚ a novel by George Orwell. Both governments used their powers to control their nation and citizens to an extreme. Under Mao Zedong’s government‚ the Chinese suffered from state-controlled media‚ destruction of traditional cultural practices and the
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Symbols/Motifs in The Awakening Art: ▪ Art becomes a symbol of both freedom and failure. ▪ A major part of Edna’s initial awakening is her decision to take up painting again‚ and it is partly through the income from the sale of some of her paintings that she is able to abandon her husband’s home and establish her own. ▪ At the same time‚ however‚ there are suggestions that Edna’s art is somehow flawed. When she tries to make a sketch of Madame Ratignolle‚ we are told that the sketch
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Technology was used in ’1984’ for nefarious purposes at worst‚ or‚ at best‚ as a way of suppressing dissent. • Television as a Propaganda Machine Television‚ as it is known today‚ was utilized in ’1984’ as a propaganda machine to subdue the masses. It was the medium that could best display what was good about Big Brother‚ and what was evil about Emmanuel Goldstein. Televised broadcasts in ’1984’ were made via telescreens‚ and they had the chilling capacity of being a two-way device.
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Themes and Symbols: It is quite difficult to distinguish some of the themes from the symbols in this story. Themes Symbols Hypocrisy The Box Religion: Past and Present The Stool Names of the characters 1. Hypocrisy The act of pretending to have beliefs‚ virtues and feelings that one does not truly possess. The word derives from the late Latin hypocrisis and Greek hupokrisis both meaning play-acting or pretence. A. The Adams and their
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1984 The novel 1984 shows many characteristics of a dystopian society. In a dystopian society people often lead fearful and dehumanizing lives while also fearing technology. In 1984 the characters in the book are forced to follow unnecessary rules or else they risk the chance of getting vaporized. The fear of technology comes into play with the telescreen used in the book. The telescreen can monitor and citizen at any time if they are in view of the telescreen. The setting of 1984 also seems to
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Lord of the Flies Military theorist Carl von Clausewitz once said: “Savage peoples are ruled by passion‚ civilized peoples by the mind. The difference lies not in the respective natures of savagery and civilization‚ but in the attendant circumstances‚ institutions‚ and so forth... even the most civilized peoples… can be fired with passionate hatred for each other.” In Lord of the Flies‚ by William Golding‚ the boys on the island slowly lose sight of their humanity‚ becoming more and
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