George Orwell 1984 Analysis

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1984 was written by George Orwell in 1949. This book is set in a dystopian society in which Big Brother (the powerful leader) has total control. Winston, a member of the “outer party” attempts to start a rebellion to save himself and others from turning into automatons. The people in this society are all watched through telescreens, and anything like face crime, thought crime can lead to vaporization. Orwell’s warning is to make sure people know and are aware of what can happen to the society if they do not speak up.
Through Winston’s character Orwell tries to oversee that people understand the concept of going into an age of darkness. “To the future or to the past, to a time when truth exists and what is done cannot be undone: From the age of uniformity, from the age of solitude, from the age of Big Brother, from the age of doublethink— greetings!” (28). Winston finally expressed himself and wrote this, he had taken a big step to do this and he makes the future seem darker than it already is. Whatever time we are in we have to do what we have to do because what we will do cannot be undone so we have to help make the future better. Orwell describes that from harmony we go to isolation to a life when we are being told what to do and accepting what they tell us, meaning we should all be careful because good things can lead to bad.
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“He began to write down the thoughts that came into his head. He wrote first in large clumsy capitals: FREEDOM IS SLAVERY. Then almost without a pause he wrote beneath it: TWO AND TWO MAKE FIVE” (277). Winston is becoming brainwashed and society is making him believe this. The only part society has not touched yet are his emotions, but they are on the verge of getting towards that. With society manipulating the people and people not speaking up enough the world will become a state of automatons like those turning into automatons in