Theme Of Power In George Orwell's '1984'

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Pages: 6

Imagine everything you know is a lie, if every belief you’ve ever had was suddenly changed. The Party is in a position of such power, that they can force anyone to follow its own ideas in order to ensure your safety. They are capable of portraying any information in a such way that it will benefit the Party and its stigma. In George Orwell’s novel, 1984, the Party uses methods of control as a way to reduce people’s ability to have feelings. The Party uses its overarching power in their favor by changing the way people think about certain ideas. The Party has the belief that staying in a war will be the only way to maintain peace in Oceania. The phrase “War is Peace, Freedom is Slavery, Ignorance is Strength” all over in order to instill this …show more content…
Doublethink is a way for the Party to give the people two completely contradictory statements that the people are supposed to believe as true. The Party can use Doublethink as a way to change the way people feel and think about feelings ultimately them entirely from their society. According to the Party, there is no external reality and no one should be doing any real thinking. They’ll propose to you an absurd idea and force you to believe it. Like when Winston “picked up the children’s history book… as though some force was pressing down upon you- something that penetrated inside your skull… persuading you, almost, to deny the evidence of your senses. In the end the Party would announce that two and two made five, and you would have to believe it”(Orwell 80). They have the ability to persuade you to follow any order they have. And when it boils down to it, they have absolute control of not only Oceania as a country, but the minds of every citizen as well. Human feelings in Oceania are forbidden and the act of sex should not be about love but solely about reproduction. They try to reduce variation in all people in order to keep everyone in the same mindset.