Thursday, March 21, 2019

Winstons Predicament in 1984 Essay -- 1984 Literature George Orwell E

Winstons Predicament in 1984The dystopian humankind George Orwell created for 1984 is a bleak, cold place, grey shaded and foul smelling, full of hate anddistrust. The humans that inhabit it do not live, they ar simplyexpected to exist for the good of the fateful society, a totalitariangovernment, while their leader gazes down at them from each w tout ensemble,watching their every move. One of these humans, and our protagonist,is Winston Smith. His problems when simplified may seem equal theproblems of any other person his inadequacy of freedom, his repressedemotions and his desperate loneliness. These problems however, argonexasperated by the fellowship he lives in.Thought crime, punishable by death, goes so far as to prohibitfreedom of feeling, never soul speech. The Party want their hoi polloi tobe simply hate machines, incapable of love or even out original thought,it wants them to live by slogans instead of natural instinct .By the determination of the first chapter W inston believes that what he is thinking andfeeling impart eventu everyy bemuse him killed, and by the middle of the bookhe takes to repeating the dogma we are the dead. Right from thebeginning we see this fatalist thinking in all Winston does, as if helives his whole life under a self imposed death sentence. At times itseems he truly does know he will be caught and has just trained hismind to accept this as inevitable. He knows the illegal diary he keepswill be read and could be used to prove him guilty of thought crime,with its scribbled missives of down with Big Brother and expect liesin the proles, and yet he carries on writing in it, pouring out hisrestrained feelings onto the creamy smooth paper. His lack of trustin communications with ... ...escribes the Partys idea of the perfect future society to Winstona boot stamping on a humans face - continuously. Its now we realise thatdespite Winstons death, this will happen in that world if thingscarried on as they were. Its at this point that nearly all hope islost. Next is the betrayal of Julia, the one last thing keepingWinston going. It is a certainty by now that there will be no happyend and that Winston will die and life outside in Air Strip One willremain the same. Winstons predicament is not then to do with love andloss, its to do with futility. For all he did, for all the rules hebroke, for all the rebellion he thought and wrote, nothing changed.The Party remains in power and no future generations were saved.Despite all his good intentions Winston dies broken, hopeless andloveless, a non-person who as good as never existed.

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