1984 Sexuality Analysis

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George Orwell’s 1984 astounded audiences for decades by the raw approach to reveal the dangers that had been exposed during the books original conception. This was strategic compliance and forced manipulation being witnessed across the world, which prompted an outcry from writers as they bared witness to the collapsing freedoms being stripped from whole populations. This outcry forced other political and social constructs to be called into question, such as how far can the mind be pushed to obtain the level of compliance being demanded, and how can sexuality be a danger to anyone other than the individuals participating in the acts? Sanity and Sexuality are abstract notions that are vulnerable to the delicate exchange of power. Winston and
This spreading infection disrupted the superimposed reality that the Party had conditioned for their populace. This continues to echo the biblical connection to the Eva persona for it was Eve who lured Adam to sin against God, just as Julia enticed Winston to commit an act of treason by partaking in the unauthorized sexual encounters. Yet, even with all of these precursors to having a meaningless affair, built only to provide a pleasurable release and a political act of rebellion, the couple committed a crime more heinous, in the eyes of the Party, than their illicit rendezvous, they fell in love. Gorman Beauchamp, author “Of Man’s Last Disobedience: Zamyitan’s “We” and Orwell’s “1984”, wrote, “but their real lese majesty is simply being in love, giving free reign to their instinctual eroticism” (295). This love that development became the most dangerous aspect of these expressed sexual desires since it was one powerful emotion that simply out of the control of the
He sees the mental manipulation and the unwavering acceptance that his fellow citizens displayed but is unable or simply unwilling to engage in any behavior that might bring about change, until he is prompted by his association with Julia, and set him on a path of discovering his true conscious mind, “until they become conscious thy will never rebel, and until after they have rebelled they cannot become conscious” (Orwell 55). However, there is more to Winston than was is obviously negotiated by the reader as they navigate the text. There is a battle of wills being dueled out within Winston, once could assume that this was caused by an initiated imbalance between Winston’s Ego, Superego, and

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