The Loss of Personal Freedoms in a Totalitarian Government

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Imagine living in a world of complete rejection of liberal ideas and absolute conformity. Citizens of this world do not have the freedom to choose their occupation. In fact, these citizens have no rights. They cannot speak freely, they do not enjoy any personal freedoms or privacy, and the media is aggressively censored. This is the world of George Orwell’s 1984 and Ray Bradbury’s Fahrenheit 451. The protagonist of Fahrenheit 451 is Guy Montag, and he is a fireman. His job is to destroy books completely by setting fire to them. Winston Smith is the main character in 1984, where he works as a civil servant in the lower class ruling party. Both of these men become entranced with the past and how life was before a totalitarian government. This fascination gives rise to a rebellion inside both men. Both societies that are revealed in these books face loss of freedoms, and are very highly controlled. The loss of personal freedoms allows a totalitarian government to instill loyalty in its citizens by using propaganda to condition the thinking of the citizens, stealing away the privacy of individuals, subjecting them to poverty, and constant fear of punishment as demonstrated by the novels Fahrenheit 451 and 1984.

George Orwell and Ray Bradbury have many similar viewpoints and have received similar criticisms for their books. George Orwell, born Eric Arthur Blair, grew up in a “lower-upper middle class” family. His father worked for the Indian Civil Service in India until Orwell was one, when his father retired, and the family settled in England. Orwell received large amounts of pressure to succeed in school. After college, Orwell joined the Indian Civil Service himself. He grew to like the Burmese and he resented the oppressio...

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