Winston's Use Of Control In The Novel 1984 By George Orwell

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In the Novel 1984 by George Orwell, The author uses post war london in the 80’s as well as characters such as Winston smith, Julia, and O’brien to show how governments, in this case The Party, uses its control and influence in a variety of ways to obtain and maintain power in a bleak and matter of fact tone. When freedom is stripped from the general populace, fear of discovery keeps that populice from wanting to take power away from those who shouldn't have it to begin with. One such freedom that is taken from the general population, minus the Proles, is freedom of Thought. To have a thought that was against the doctrines of The Party was called “Thoughtcrime...[which] was not a thing that could be concealed forever...sooner or later they …show more content…

When the people are always being told “everything is fine, everything is great” they will think that they have no reason to rebel. Why would you try to fix something that was never broken in the first place? In 1984, Winston specifically refers to how “it appears that there had even been demonstrations to thank Big Brother for raising the chocolate ration…[when] only yesterday...it had been announced that the ration was to be reduced..”(Orwell 140). Take something as simple as chocolate rations, and apply it to something as major as a war effort. When the public is constantly feed news about how life is going well and everything is perfect, why would the public want to go against the government or some such organization in power that made such prosperity and good luck possible? Propaganda can be used to place a target onto someone else, routing the anger or any hostile intentions from those in power to perhaps an enemy, or threat of those in power. In 1984, specifically in a newsflash which detailed “a gory description of the annihilation of [the] Eurasian army, with stupendous figures of killed and prisoners…” (Orwell 115). When an enemy is established, all the energy that can be used against those in power is spent on hating that enemy, Not against the oppressors where their anger should be. Tactics like these were used by the Nazi party during WWII. “After the German invasion of the Soviet Union, Nazi propaganda stressed to both civilians at home and to soldiers, police officers, and non-German auxiliaries serving in occupied territory themes linking Soviet Communism to European Jewry, presenting Germany as the defender of “Western” culture against the “Judeo-Bolshevik threat, and painting an apocalyptic picture of what would happen if the Soviets won the war” (ushmm.org), is one such instance of identifying an enemy and than routing anger from the people in

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