Totalitarian Regimes Essays

  • Animal Farm as a Political Satire to Criticise Totalitarian Regimes

    4632 Words  | 10 Pages

    Animal Farm as a Political Satire to Criticise Totalitarian Regimes This study aims to determine that George Orwell's Animal Farm is a political satire which was written to criticise totalitarian regimes and particularly Stalin's practices in Russia. In order to provide background information that would reveal causes led Orwell to write Animal Farm, Chapter one is devoted to a brief summary of the progress of author's life and significant events that had impact on his political convictions. Chapter

  • Orwell's Perception of the Political Power of Language

    729 Words  | 2 Pages

    language. He notes the recognized ability of language to distort truth and deceive masses in his essay "Politics and the English Language", and attempts to alert the public of this power in his novel Nineteen-Eighty-Four . Depicting dystopia of a totalitarian system at a complete extreme, Orwelll's novel is essentially about psychological control of the public. In the creation of "Newspeak", Orwell portrays the effects of recurring abuse of language by government, and demonstrates how language can be

  • The Totalitarian Regime of Cuba

    1797 Words  | 4 Pages

    The Totalitarian Regime of Cuba When Columbus came to Cuba in 1492, he and his predecessors would probably never have imagined of this island’s outcome within the centuries ahead. from conquering the country, to its independence, to the totalitarian regime put into it, all these major events have made the island what it is today. Before giving the whole story about the Communists, one must understand how the country was born so here’s a little bit of a background history: Spain had conquered

  • slavery and the plantation

    2101 Words  | 5 Pages

    of the slaves, however, live, worked and died on plantations where the owners assigned much of their authority to overseers. The plantation was a combination factory, village and police precinct. The most obvious characteristic was the totalitarian regime placed on the slave. One example of this was a communal nursery, which prepared slave children for slavery and made it possible for their mothers to work in the fields. The woman who cared for black children was commonly designated "aunty"

  • 198451: The Year of the Salamander

    1876 Words  | 4 Pages

    cutting across all ideologies, warning of the threat to humanity should any government, of whatever political complexion, assume absolute power” (Nineteen Eighty-Four 12). Meanwhile Bradbury described the horrors of a society that became a totalitarian regime through the Firemen who attempted to control the ability of thought. Both of these structures depended on limiting the thought of the citizens either through Newspeak in which the undesirable thoughts could not be expressed or by destroying

  • Animal Farm And The Russian Revolution

    863 Words  | 2 Pages

    George Orwell’s novel Animal Farm is a great example of allegory and political satire. The novel was written to criticize totalitarian regimes and particularly Stalin's corrupt rule in Russia. In the first chapter Orwell gives his reasons for writing the story and what he hopes it will accomplish. It also gives reference to the farm and how it relates to the conflicts of the Russian revolution. The characters, settings, and the plot were written to describe the social upheaval during that period

  • Brave New World: Hitler and the Iron Curtain

    752 Words  | 2 Pages

    "To make them love it is the task assigned, in present- day totalitarian states, to ministries of propaganda…." (Huxley page #)  Thus, through hypnopaedic teaching (brainwashing), mandatory attendance to community gatherings, and allusions to prominent political dictators, Huxley bitterly satirized totalitarian propaganda and political technique to point out the problems of a dystopian society. The way the fascist and totalitarian regimes used mass propaganda techniques to brainwash their people was

  • Myanmar: A Nation in Crisis

    5108 Words  | 11 Pages

    Myanmar: A Nation in Crisis The nation of Myanmar, also known as Burma, is currently under the rule of a ruthless totalitarian regime, guilty of numerous human rights violations and target of intense international criticism. Located in Southeast Asia, on the western border of Thailand and Laos, it has been under military rule since World War II. Burma is mired in socioeconomic crisis stemming from the rule of the military junta, and the citizens are suffering. The environment of Burma is being

  • The Cherry Orchard and the Rise of Bolshevism

    3100 Words  | 7 Pages

    the author discounts the importance of the then-emerging revolutionaries. Yet the play reveals a major reason why Communism ultimately received very little support from the gradual-minded middle class, which lead to a bloody revolution and totalitarian regimes for a good part of a century. It is this insight which provides contemporary critiques of socialist movements with a lesson about human nature -- a lesson that serves to show that Communism and other forms of ideological socialism have never

  • Ideologies of the Democracy Movement in China

    3349 Words  | 7 Pages

    was made by Deng in order to gain public support. During Deng’s reign, a series of economic reforms were made. These reforms had major impacts on both the economy and the society of China. Although it has been argued that Deng was leading a totalitarian regime, historians tend to overlook the idea that the Chinese have different ideologies and morals than people in the west. Chinese intellectuals who looked to the west as a model for democracy absorbed themselves into the western culture, and believed

  • George Orwell's Nineteen Eighty-Four

    1289 Words  | 3 Pages

    'Nineteen Eighty-Four', I intend to discuss the type of Government envisaged by Orwell and to what extent his totalitarian Party, 'Ingsoc', satirises past regimes. I will also discuss Orwell's motive in writing such a piece and how his writing style helps it become clear.The main theme of Nineteen Eighty-Four concerns the restrictions imposed on individual freedom by a totalitarian regime. Orwell shows how such a system can impose its will on the people through manipulation of the press, the elimination

  • Dmitri Shostakovich and Johann Sebastian Bach

    1487 Words  | 3 Pages

    lived in an uneasy relationship with the ideologically oppressive authorities. His life was difficult, but from his very first symphony of 1925 he was hailed as one of the greatest composers of his day. He had two public clashes with Stalin’s totalitarian regime, but survived. Today, a fierce argument rages over his actual political leanings: he never publicly showed dissatisfaction with communism, but his supposed memoirs paint a very different picture. The world of music changed greatly between

  • The Government Should Respect Property Rights

    729 Words  | 2 Pages

    of thousands of dollars. Finally, after years of struggle the government demands, as a condition for approving your little walkway, that you “donate” a portion of your land to the state. Do these sound like nightmarish stories out of some totalitarian regime? Shockingly, they are normal, everyday incidents for property owners across the nation. In California, for example, a state agency called the California Coastal Commission routinely tramples the property rights of coastal landowners. People

  • Authoritarian Vs. Totalitarian Regime

    1145 Words  | 3 Pages

    Political theorists seek to systematize and classify various forms of government which have existed and still exist in the contemporary world. Authoritarian and totalitarian regimes are very important subject of studies and debates. As the question is suggesting there are basic differences between these regimes that allow us to distinct them. In this essay, I will describe crucial differences which are: existence of political pluralism and ideology, rate of the government control over society, degree

  • The Soviet Union as a totalitarian regime

    1968 Words  | 4 Pages

    and commands authority from the public and private lives of citizens to the functions of social and economic institutions in order to be distinguished as a totalitarian state. Through the study of Juan Linz, Hannah Arendt and other political philosophers, we are able to define the Soviet Union under Stalin’s control as a true totalitarian regime. The simultaneous components of the center of power surrounding Stalin and his Central Committee, a Stalinist ideology manipulated from Marxist and Leninist

  • The Totalitarian Regime In The Handmaid's Tale

    554 Words  | 2 Pages

    Living under totalitarian regimes, Marji and Offred are women being oppressed by the government through others, developing a sense of fear. As a method of gaining control, women in power or prominent positions are used to spread each regimes message, and keep other women without power feeling protected. As Marji walks down the street wearing a jacket, pin, and sneakers as symbols of her abhorrence towards the Shah’s and is stopped by a group of women: “They were the Guardians of the Revolution, the

  • Political Protest under the Totalitarian System

    4003 Words  | 9 Pages

    The paper concerns the principles presupposed in political protest against the totalitarian regime. In contrast to the utilitarian view of participating in political protest (K.D.Opp, M. Taylor) the author tries to suggest the moral model of political protest. According to this model, the main reason and motif for challenging the regime is the transgression of the limits of concession, which jeopardizes the spiritual identity and essential qualities of the individuals and all groups (i.e., Church

  • The Dominican Republic, and its owner, Rafael Leonidas Trujillo

    1260 Words  | 3 Pages

    The Dominican Republic, and its owner, Rafael Leonidas Trujillo All throughout the 20th century we can observe the marked presence of totalitarian regimes and governments in Latin America. Countries like Cuba, Chile, Brazil, Argentina, Nicaragua and the Dominican Republic all suffered under the merciless rule of dictators and military leaders. Yet the latter country, the Dominican Republic, experienced a unique variation of these popular dictatorships, one that in the eyes of the world of those

  • George Orwell's 1984: The Oppression Of Totalitarian Regime

    749 Words  | 2 Pages

    running one of the most oppressive regimes in human history. In order to further reaffirm his control over the citizens of the USSR, he bans books left and right, not letting the public get their hands on criticisms and new ideas as he fears being overthrown. Many authors in the region try to develop satire against the regime without directly criticizing it. One of these authors is George Orwell, who at the time had witnessed the oppression of totalitarian regimes like that of the Soviet Union. Orwell

  • Inside a Totalitarian Regime: Key features of Stalinism

    1656 Words  | 4 Pages

    from the middle of the 1920’s until his death in 1953. His rule deeply transformed the USSR and destalinization is still not fully achieved today. While Stalinism and Nazism are often compared because they were the two totalitarian regimes of the 20th century, the Stalinist regime lasted for decades while Nazism collapsed after 12 years, thus raising several questions concerning the particular nature of the Stalinist Society. What were the key features of Stalinism, thus differentiating Stalin’s