1984 George Orwell Passage Analysis Essay

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This passage contains a very important theme that Orwell seems to bring up a lot throughout the book. Orwell always writes about Winston and how he is going against the Party, and how the more and more he goes against them he somewhat begins to remember memories from before the time of the Party. What Orwell is trying to get at is that the Party has been brainwashing and taking over these citizens minds for years. As the people break the rules to do the things that are enjoyable, they realize that they used to be able to do this before the time of the Party. What Winston is starting to find is that the Party has slowly taken away things that they love so they will forget them and the new things that they have replaced them with is their only reality. …show more content…

Orwell displays this when he writes, “It aroused in Winston dim memories of something seen long ago on a wall or a hoarding—a vast bottle composed of electric lights which seemed to move up and down and pour its contents into the glass” (Orwell 178), from this passage Orwell is directly saying that as Winston begins to do things that the Party no longer allows, and it brings back memories. The most important part of the passage is also that Orwell’s diction paints a picture that is very lively and energetic, it makes the past memories that Winston has from before the Party seem a lot better of what is going on now with the Party. This point of Winston remembering these amazing memories reoccurs constantly in the book, but why exactly does Winston forget these memories? The Party constantly is altering and destroying the past. Oceania is a very robotic society, everyone must believe and do exactly what the Party says. By having these daily and weekly rituals the people in Oceania always have to focus on what the Party wants them to do. They never have the opportunity to think about anything

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