George Orwell's Dystopian View Of 1984

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George Orwell’s dystopian novel 1984, which was released in 1949, has many parallels with society today. It was recently reported that George Orwell’s “dystopian vision of the future is alive and in rude good health” (Funnell, 2014). This illustrates America’s realization that the novel is very relevant to life in 2016. Obvious connections exist between the predictions in 1984 and events in the life of the average American, when one looks at the increasing infringements on freedom, numerous technological advancements, and in the way we speak and think. Here in the United States, it is a privilege to have the right to freedom which many people take for granted. The Oceanian people in 1984 would be happy with even a little of that liberty. …show more content…

Each passing decade brings us closer to the language of Newspeak that is used by the Party in the novel. Newspeak in 1984 blends and simplifies existing words of the English language until it is only a shell of itself. The language gets condensed, so the vocabulary shrinks each year it is used. It serves to narrow the range of thought so completely by having each new word “with its meaning rigidly defined and all its subsidiary meanings rubbed out and forgotten” (1.5.23 Syme. Orwell). Though Newspeak sounds cringe worthy to most who read Orwell’s dystopian tale, it is not far off from the language we use on Twitter and through texting. Even major news programs and government posts use the Twitter language. It has reached the point where “Twitter is no longer merely a computer shorthand but has become an integral facet of our mainstream media.” Twitter uses shortened, condensed forms of regular words such as finna, OMG, hbu, and YOLO. These abbreviated versions, along with word limits on Tweets, limit how much can be explained. Ideas cannot be discussed in enough detail with such a small number of words available. The individual lexicon of Americans shrinks because of the laziness and unwillingness to think. All around it is just another method of control like the way Newspeak controls Winston and other users of the language. This creates young generations in both societies that are “incapable of examining the implications of ideas, challenging information, and thinking independently”

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