Theme Of Totalitarianism In 1984

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1984 Works of dystopian fiction have served to display the dark side of human nature, the most common themes of this dark genre is oppression, poverty, and squalor. Though in most pieces of text written in this genre the protagonist often views the oppression as something wrong, and often find themselves trying to bring to light the true horrors of their way of life. In George Orwell’s novel 1984, the bureaucracy that controls society known as The Party, dehumanizes their citizens by constantly monitoring their actions, way of life, very thoughts, and manipulating their own history so that the government is seen as always right. Winston Smith, the protagonist of the novel has always found something wrong with their society, and often secretly resisted the common way of thinking. Winston illuminates the danger of totalitarianism and how it has the ability destroy mankind's most human qualities. …show more content…

For example, one of the most common moods found in the text is helplessness, in the text Winston begins to speak about how if there was such a thing as hope only the proles, those living in the slums and the like, but what stopped others from rebelling was the fact that, “Until they become conscious they will never rebel, and until after they have rebelled they cannot become conscious” (p.70). To put in another way, it is hopeless to think that anyone could rebel against The Party, for none of them have the conscious to do so. Here the author uses a motif to symbolise how the society Winston lives in is controlled in such a way that it’s as if they don’t even have a will of their own, and they can never really become aware of themselves without rebelling, which they will never have the will to do. Which emphasizes how the mood of this society is hopelessness, hopelessness for freedom, and for

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