Orwell

Page 17 of 50 - About 500 Essays
  • Premium Essay

    Doublethink In George Orwell's 1984

    For example, Winston has dreamt of sleeping with an elder woman, but he was petrified of his unknown actions in his sleep. He thought “it had got to be written down, it had got to be confessed” (Orwell 68). He was afraid that his movements and speech in his sleep will be labeled as thoughtcrime. This may be viewed as a violation to freedom of speech by Big Brother. Additionally, Oceania’s citizens are obligated to refer to doublethink to be able

    Words: 689 - Pages: 3

  • Free Essay

    Thematicessay

    read/watched in class, some examples include: Nineteen Eighty-Four by George Orwell, Jane Eyre by Charlotte Brontë, The Sign of the Four by Arthur Conan Doyle and, The Rime of the Ancient Mariner by Samuel Taylor Coleridge. These stories are all very different but share that same lesson of putting matters into your own hands. Trust no one or you will be hurt or put into danger. In Nineteen Eighty-Four by George Orwell, you can’t trust the government. The government also known as The Party, watches

    Words: 971 - Pages: 4

  • Premium Essay

    1984 Betrayal Essay

    believe it. They can’t get inside you” (Orwell 166).

    Words: 732 - Pages: 3

  • Premium Essay

    Hitler's Role In 1984

    In the book 1984 by George Orwell, society doesn't realize the harmful and controlling factors of Big Brother in which they are encompassed. The Big Brother factor has been enforced throughout history by those seeking power and control. After the Holocaust under the rule of the infamous Hitler, George Orwell, in writing 1984, responded to his thoughts toward this tragic event and what Nazi society had been. George Orwell then continues to dig deeper and warns future generations of what could in fact

    Words: 1417 - Pages: 6

  • Premium Essay

    Dystopia In George Orwell's 'Animal Farm'

    life where nothing was ever unexpected. Or inconvenient. Or unusual. Is a life without colour, pain or past.” This quote can be interpreted as a life without problems, surprises or consequences, is a life with no originality or vitality. George Orwell uses a large variety of literary elements such as, symbols, dramatic irony and conflict

    Words: 1074 - Pages: 5

  • Premium Essay

    Shooting An Elephant

    Shooting an Elephant is a short story by George Orwell that details an English police officer’s experience with a disturbance in his town. Commotion is caused by an elephant rampaging through the town. As expected, this event causes great conflict for both the citizens of the town, as well as the police officer. Besides the obvious conflict of physical danger, internal conflicts arise as well. The main external conflict is the fact that a giant elephant is on the loose. Although it is

    Words: 719 - Pages: 3

  • Premium Essay

    The Hierarchy Of Power In George Orwell's Animal Farm

    Animal Farm itself is an allegory to the Russian Revolution and allows Orwell to comment playfully upon the political matter in a way all people can understand. With the pigs Napoleon and Snowball representing leaders Stalin and Trotsky, he artfully maneuvers retelling the Russian Revolution in order to advocate for a political change. Within the multiple battles and power struggles that occur throughout the novel, Orwell is able to satirically comment on the hierarchy of power and the way these

    Words: 569 - Pages: 3

  • Premium Essay

    A Clockwork Orange Totalitarianism

    very nature demand control over the people, encompassing all aspects of their lives, and through the use of surveillance, this control is maintained. Through the works of Anthony Burgess in A Clockwork Orange, Tom Rob Smith in Child 44, and George Orwell in 1984, these authors take a closer look into the necessity of surveillance in the survival of any totalitarian government. To begin with, the motivation for using surveillance over the people stems from the concept of power, maintaining the power

    Words: 1946 - Pages: 8

  • Free Essay

    Shooting an Elephant

    Shooting an elephant ”Shooting an elephant” is an essay written by George Orwell and published in 1936. The text is told by a first person narrator, who tells us about being a policeman in Burma and about his doubt, whether to kill an animal or not. The man who tells us the story is an unhappy young policeman who lives in mental isolation. He hates British imperialism, he hates Burmese natives, and he hates his job. He feels like a target for the Burmese people. The natives are treating him

    Words: 1048 - Pages: 5

  • Premium Essay

    Animal Farm Book Review

    Animal Farm A review by: Dimitrios Pastirmatzis "Animal Farm is an allegorical and dystopian novella by George Orwell, first published in England on 17 August 1945"(1) Animal Farm is a book written in England on the 17th of August of 1945, when the Soviet Union was in the midst of the Stalinist era and is critical of the situation that was developing there. In George Orwell's views the Soviet union was turned into an inhumane dictatorship built around a single man and enforced through sheer

    Words: 982 - Pages: 4

Page   1 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 50