Example Of Monotony In 1984

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Monotone Melancholy Across the world there are countless different cultures, traditions, and opinions. There is a group of people in Tibet who live at altitudes of 14,800 feet (Cite 1), there are some in Thailand that eat ground up bats in some kind of paste (Cite 2), and there is even a village in India that tosses newborns off of a 50 feet terrace in order to give them luck (Cite 3). Now, what do all of these cultural characteristics have in common? Absolutely nothing! These different cultures create a wonderful array of thought. Contrarily, George Orwell created a world where everyone holds the same view, the same ideology, and the same allegiance in his novel 1984. Instead, this world was saturated with no unique distinctions. Everyone was essentially equivalent. Of course, there would be no overbearing, uncomfortable political discussion on Thanksgiving between uncle Tom and Grandma, but no person would have any individual opinion. Additionally, Orwell shows a multitude unfavorable outcomes of this monotony. Orwell shows the obvious negative effects of complete monotony in ideology and attitudes with the stagnation of societal growth, with the fear and despair that it incites, and with the meaningless of individual existence. Of all of these …show more content…

The Party maintains a philosophy that completely disregards the world outside of the mind. Winston describes it as,“ the very existence of external reality, was tactically denied by their philosophy.“ (80) This means that the Party possesses a somewhat solipsistic philosophy. To explain, the Party holds that the outside world is illegitimate and only thoughts within the mind are reality. Ergo, every action in external reality is simply a figment of the imagination. Using this philosophy, the Party can downplay individuality even more by negating actual events that were caused by people who wanted to make a

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