What Is George Orwell's Response To The Book 1984

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1984, a novel written by George Orwell which was actually published in 1949. The setting takes place in London, England 1984, personal space and privacy is never granted throughout this world. Cameras, mics, people, constantly watching you; observing you and allowed to do whatever they please to do with you. This novel really puts me in the mind of what it would be like to live in a society with a lack of privacy, and how it impacts individuals and society as a whole. Not being able to express my feelings or be myself sounds like hell, which this novel expresses so much if the government gained too much power and started controlling people forcefully and mentally. If there is one word that can describe exactly what this book portrays and have the reader actually think about and that word would be, totalitarianism. Totalitarianism is a political system where the state recognizes no limits to its authority and strives to regulate every aspect of public and private life wherever feasible. From page one all the way to the end, totalitarianism is always there and it’s stronger than the people even know. Orwell writes about a society …show more content…
In Russia they would use propaganda to show that the government is good, powerful, always right, and more. Just like in the story if the government found out you were being disloyal you would be arrested and maybe even killed. Winston’s job in the story was to rewrite history or destroy anything that would make their government look bad, so the people think that everything thing is “okay”. That actually happened in Russian they would rewrite history and have the education department teach kids to be loyal and love their leader. Totalitarian rule is a way of brainwashing people to believe that their leader is a “God”, and to not have their own opinions like the world has today, for the most