How Does Orwell Present Situational Irony In 1984

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George Orwell, author of 1984, summons visions of an ominous society and the descent into a spiralling abyss of hopelessness. Tone expresses how the author feels about a subject. Often mistaken with tone, mood depicts how the author perceives and conveys an event to the audience. Situational irony occurs when the audience expects an event to happen that does not actually occur within the timeline. Whereas, dramatic irony occurs when the audience knows of an event the character does not. In the book, the dark tone of the novel conveys the numbing of society while the irony demonstrates how trusting others affects views and relationships. However, paradox suggests something contradictory to logical reasoning. Doublethink contributes to the hopelessness by illustrating a paradox within society. Therefore, Orwell illustrates tone, paradox, and irony through how the government controls emotions, time, thoughts, and trust in order to However, within Orwell's nightmare of the future, he ironically foresees trust as the enemy of both government and society. Winston instantly trusts O'Brien because he most likely holds "a secretly held belief" (11) similar to himself. Moreover, a situationally ironic example surfaces when the familiar voice of Mr. Charrington sings before they are caught, "Here comes a candle to light you to bed, here comes a chopper to chop off your head!" (222). Yet another situationally ironic example emerges when Winston gives in to O’Brien and his method of torture screaming, “Do it to Julia! Do it to Julia! Not me! I don’t care what you do to her. Tear her face off, strip her to the bones. Not me!” (286). At the conclusion of the book Winston displays his true, brainwashed colors when he admits “He loved Big Brother” (298). Throughout the book, Orwell uses irony to communicate trusting people in a hopeless future alters someone mentally and

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