1984 Feminist Analysis

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George Orwell’s novel, 1984, follows Winston Smith in his crimes against the government, Big Brother. Along the way, Winston describes old relationships and new ones involving women, however it is not in a positive aspect. Throughout the story, women are portrayed as inferior to men. One of the first women introduced to the reader is Mrs. Parson. In this scene, she is asking Winston for assistance on fixing her sink. Her apartment is hectic, with her children running and screaming around the house and the kitchen being dirty. The atmosphere of the apartment reflects her and how she has no control. Her constant remark is that “if Tom was home” he would be able to do it.(22) She has very little control over the children and is constantly mentioning they are acting this way because he is not home. Another women is Winston’s wife, Katherine. The couple has been separated for some time, but Winston recalls her negatively. …show more content…

In book one, Winston “hated her because she was young and pretty and sexless.”(16) He disliked a woman because he could not have sex with her and thought about physically harming her because of it. When he later starts to have an affair with her, he likes her more when he finds out that she has slept around before even though it is against the law. According to George Orwell, women have to please men sexually, which is one of their few purposes on this planet. Orwell even uses the only leading female character to send hate to women. Julia is “always in the stink of women! How (she) hates women” because she has to live with thirty other girls.(108) Apparently being a woman is so bad that even women hate it. Orwell ruins the only important female role by having her be a misogynist. The sexist thoughts and degrading remarks throughout the novel is a representation of Orwell’s feelings towards women. Surely, if he was alive, he would be one of the founders of the “women aren’t people”

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