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- Nineteen Eighty-Four is a compelling novel,
- written in the period just after W.W.II. It details the life of one man, Winston Smith, and his struggles with an undoubtedly
- fascist government. The book is set approximately in the year 1984, in which Winston's society is ruled by a governing force
- known as The Party. At the head of this government is a fictional figure known as Big Brother, to whom all citizens must love
- and respect. In this society, privacy and freedom do not exist. People are constantly monitored by telescreens, and subjected
- to a constant barrage of propaganda. Any devious thought or action is dealt with by cruel and deadly punishment. Winston is a
- worker in one of the government agencies. His job: to rewrite the past so that The Party, specifically Big Brother, appears to
- be omnipotent. From as long as he can remember, he has despised The Party and what it stood for, although he doesn't reveal
- his true feelings to anyone around him. When Winston begins a torrid love affair with one of the young women in his agency
- named Julia, he finds someone else who shares in his beliefs. The two have several meetings throughout the book, in which they
- discuss their hatred for the government. They join a secret alliance called The Brotherhood, who's specific purpose is the end
- of The Party. Through the literature of The Brotherhood, they learn about the inner workings of The Party and how it
- accomplishes its stronghold on the people. The world as Winston knows it comes crashing down when he and Julia are
- arrested by the thought police, a faction of the government which deals with those who do not agree and abide by the ways of
- The Party. They are taken to a prison unlike any other. Winston is constantly tortured and beaten, until he confesses to crimes
- which he didn't commit or never even happened. If the party just killed Winston right away, they might run the risk of making a
- martyr out of him. Instead they re-educate him with the morals of The Party, using such techniques as pain, starvation, and
- using Winston's greatest fear against him. Once re- educated, he is introduced back into society. But he is not the same person,
- just a hollow shell. Winston had once said in the novel that if he could die hating Big Brother, then he would have won. But
- when Winston is finally killed, the only thing he can think is that he loves Big Brother. As this book was written just after the
- reign of Hitler in W.W.II, one can easily guess where Orwell got the basis for it. The world was in a general state of disbelief
- and panic after the atrocities that Hitler had committed. It was hoped that nothing like this would ever happen again. Nineteen
- Eighty- Four is a good reason why. The novel shows what could have happened if Hitler was able to continue upon his quest
- for power. The novel can also apply to the present era, as the novel was actually set in more modern times. Not only does the
- novel apply to Hitler's way of thinking, but also to Stalin. Even though both are at opposite sides of the political spectrum, they
- both established totalitarian governments. The Party also ran a totalitarian government but on a much larger scale. A large part
- of the novel deals with the relationship between The Party and society. Many of the techniques used by The Party are similar to
- those used by Hitler or any controlling government for that matter. One of these ways is by propaganda. With telescreens in
- everyone's homes, it was very easy to broadcast the views and beliefs of The Party. Also, as this was the only form of
- broadcasted media, the government could easily control what the people watched and listened to. Another form of propaganda
- was by means of posters and slogans. In this society it was impossible to go anywhere without seeing a poster of Big Brother
- and reading slogans such as BIG BROTHER IS WATCHING YOU and War is Peace...Freedom is Slavery...Ignorance is
- Strength. Hitler was a big fan of propaganda and used it a great deal. Also, The Party controlled all written media, and
- therefore could write and re-write anything it chooses to. During his reign, Hitler realized that he needed to get younger people
- involved in his conquest. He set up youth camps and youth organizations. This made the younger generations of Nazi Germans
- feel like part of the struggle. In the book, youths are also involved in various governmental groups. The mind of a child is a very
- easy thing to manipulate. If the government can convince a child, even reward them for turning in family members and loved
- ones, they will have succeeded in corrupting one of the basic units in society, the family. One thing you can count on is that your
- family is usually there to support you, and not be more loyal to a dictatorial leader than yourself. When establishing a society in
- which you plan on oppressing the people, you must make sure of one thing: they do not think they are being oppressed. The
- only was in which you can do this is to withhold information and blatantly lie to them. One way that this is done in the novel is
- by re-writing history as time progresses. By doing this, people can look back on the past and will only see whatever the
- governing party wishes. Although Hitler did not go to such extreme measures, he had no problem lying to the general
- population to give them a false sense of security. Back in the 1930's and 1940's, the population of Germany probably thought
- they were better off than they actually were. When one of the key governmental figures in the novel is discussing the motives
- behind the rule of The Party, he mentions that its main purpose is to watch over and guide the people, as they are frail and
- cowardly, and cannot do it by themselves. This is very similar to what the English political philosopher Hobbes thought. He
- believed that man was self-destructive and needed a powerful government to control them. Many people today despise the
- views of Hobbes as they are very insulting to us as humans. We like to believe that we can be responsible for our own destiny,
- and do not need an all-knowing government to take charge and run our lives. One interesting point in the novel was that the
- chief enemy of The Party was a Jewish man named Emmanuel Goldstein. Goldstein was a political figure who had vanished into
- the underground and was rumoured to have started the group called The Brotherhood. Since The Party was an extreme
- version of Hitler and the totalitarian movements in the earlier part of the twentieth century, it was ironic that the crusade for
- freedom was led by a Jewish man. This also relates to W.W.II, as the Jews were the principle group of people persecuted by
- the Nazis. On a whole, this novel was a very interesting piece of reading. It really makes one think how lucky we are to live in a
- society in which we have the freedom to live as we choose. If many of the fundamental freedoms which we sometimes take for
- granted were taken away, we might find life to be like it is in the novel. I could not imagine living when anything I believed
- which deviated from normal paths of thought could result in my death. Many of the greatest changes in society have been
- made by those people who stray from the well-beaten path in search of a greater truth. The novel also caused myself to reflect
- upon how important it was that such tyrannical dictators such as Hitler have been stopped, sometimes with great costs, from
- making life unbearable. Reading this novel gave me a great sense of hope for human kind, as we have been able to keep
- totalitarian movements under control. Maybe sometimes people can get carried away with a lust for power, but it will always
- come back to living in a society that is tolerable to everyone. It is safe to say that a Utopian society will never exist, but we
- must make an effort to get as close as we can. Many disputes which occur today are because of petty differences between
- people. Although there are some flaws in human nature, we have always been able to keep from digging a grave too deep to
- climb out of. It is scary to think how close the world could have come to having a society like the one in Nineteen Eighty Four,
- and know that we as humans have to gain a better understanding of one another. I enjoyed reading this book because not only
- did it give the reader something exciting to read, but it also was able to put an interesting perspective on life itself.
- <br><br><b>Bibliography</b><br><br>
- 1984 by george orwell
- <br><br>
- Words: 1502
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