The Importance Of Power In George Orwell's 1984

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“War is Peace. Freedom is Slavery. Ignorance is Strength.” (Pg. 4)” In George Orwell’s 1984, power plays a major role. These words echo throughout Oceania, the fictional totalitarian state where this novel is located. In Oceania, nobody is free, from the telescreens on every corner, there is constant surveillance. Through the Thought Police, the government agency that deals with Thoughtcrime, the act of thinking of a rebellious idea or concept, Oceania forces conformity to the principles of English Socialism, or Ingsoc, by enforcing the thoughts of all its citizens, as a treasonous thought is grounds for immediate death. Oceania is constantly rewriting history, literally. The government has a branch, The Ministry of Truth, where the protagonist Winston Smith works, dedicated to the falsification of historical documents and records, newspapers, and photographs to eradicate all opposition to the government and transform it into propaganda. This …show more content…

The Oceanian government has practically eliminated all other crime, as no good, honest, respectable citizen would ever go against the wishes of Big Brother, at least not in public. While the Government can eradicate all the treasonous books, records, music, movies, and publicly treasonous people they want, there will never be true conformity, true obedience, true ignorance from their citizens unless the emotions that control them, their original ideas, their passions, or anything that represents their humanity, is expunged. In the words of The Party “War is Peace, Freedom is Slavery, Ignorance is Strength”. Through mottos, slogans, and a new language that erases individuality and expression, Orwell stresses the ever-present danger of forced conformity and obedience in a totalitarian

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