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George Orwell, 1984, Animal farm, Appunti di Inglese

Biography of George Orwell and brief summary of 1984 and Animal farm

Tipologia: Appunti

2018/2019

Caricato il 12/10/2019

Utente sconosciuto
Utente sconosciuto 🇮🇹

4.7

(6)

20 documenti

Anteprima parziale del testo

Scarica George Orwell, 1984, Animal farm e più Appunti in PDF di Inglese solo su Docsity! GEORGE ORWELL (1903 – 1950) political writing: he took the defenses of the ordinary people Orwell was born in India. He entered in the Indian Imperial Police becoming an officer. After working in France, he moved to Spain, fighting against Franco in the left-wing Republican government during the civil war. He wrote essay and full-length books. Although he was one of them, he hated intellectuals. Writing, he wanted to expose lies and injustice in the political world, with a sort of Partisanship​. NINETEEN-EIGHTY-FOUR 1949 Talking about ​politic​, in this book Orwell writes about: - the perfect totalitarian State (such as the Soviet Union’s one) - propaganda (like in the Nazi dictatorship) - language as a strument of control (the newspeak of that time) - repression - conflict The book is set in 1984 in Oceania, one of three perpetually warring totalitarian states (the other two are Eurasia and Eastasia). Oceania is governed by the all-controlling Party, which has brainwashed the population into unthinking obedience to its leader, Big Brother. The Party has created a propagandistic language known as Newspeak, which is designed to limit free thought and promote the Party’s doctrines. Its words include ​doublethink​ (belief in contradictory ideas simultaneously), which is reflected in the Party’s slogans: “War is peace,” “Freedom is slavery,” and “Ignorance is strength.” The Party maintains control through the Thought Police and continual surveillance. The book’s hero, Winston Smith, is a minor party functionary living in a London that is still shattered by a nuclear war that took place not long after World War II. He belongs to the Outer Party, and his job is to rewrite history in the Ministry of Truth, bringing it in line with current political thinking. However, Winston’s longing for truth and decency leads him to secretly rebel against the government. He embarks on a forbidden affair with Julia, a like-minded woman, and they rent a room in a neighborhood populated by Proles (short for ​proletariats​). Winston also becomes increasingly interested in the Brotherhood, a group of dissenters. Unbeknownst to Winston and Julia, however, they are being watched closely (ubiquitous posters throughout the city warn residents that “Big Brother is watching you.”). When Winston is approached by O’Brien—an official of the Inner Party who appears to be a secret member of the Brotherhood—the trap is set. O’Brien is actually a spy for the Party, on the lookout for “thought-criminals,” and Winston and Julia are eventually caught and sent to the Ministry of Love for a violent reeducation. The ensuing imprisonment, torture, and reeducation of Winston are intended not merely to break him physically or make him submit but to root out his independence and destroy his dignity and humanity. In Room 101, where prisoners are forced into submission by exposure to their worst nightmares, Winston panics as a cage of rats is attached to his head. He yells out for his tormentors to “Do it to Julia!” and states that he does not care what happens to her. With this betrayal, Winston is released. He later encounters Julia, and neither is interested in the other. Instead Winston loves Big Brother.
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