Freedom In George Orwell's '1984'

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Freedom. It can be simply defined as the right to act, speak, or think without restraints, but it means a whole deal more when a person cannot possess this freedom. One of George Orwell’s characters, Winston Smith, in his novel 1984, exemplifies this struggle for freedom immensely. Winston keeps a journal that holds his imaginary life of freedom within its pages that can just as easily be torn out as they are written in; Winston’s reality of freedom is very unstable compared to how he writes of it being. All of this thoughts, feeling, and frustrations are written down in that journal, which is strongly forbidden by the Thought Police. He relies on that journal as his last hope to change Winston uses this forbidden journal as his way …show more content…

He first has a deep hatred for Big Brother and all he wants to do it take him down by joining this so called Brotherhood. Once the journal is removed from his possession, it was as if Winston’s soul was removed as well. “There were things, your own acts, from which you could not recover. Something was killed in your breast; burned out, cauterized out” (Orwell 290), He no longer had the desire to be anything more than another enslaved human of Oceania. This proves that without this journal being there throughout his journey through life, he would, in fact, just be another thoughtless, mindless citizen of Oceania, “He was back in the Ministry of Love, with everything forgiven, his soul as white as snow”(Orwell 297). Orwell is comparison to snow is showing how pure Winston has become. He has been brainwashed into being the perfect follower of Big Brother, go against everything the old Winston would ever imagine of. Winston’s image of a perfect world and his memories of the world before Big Brother, and free of Big Brother, is held within the pages of his very illegal journal. He holds his whole life of thoughts, and feelings inside the journal. Once it was exposed to the Party members, his perfect world is shattered, along with himself. Winston journal was his last hope for society to be an actual society again, free of any dictator. This simple thing dictated Winston’s life. Guiding him on what to believe in and fight

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