Write An Essay On George Orwell's '1984'

786 Words2 Pages

Living a life with a chance, not an equal chance, but just even a small chance, any chance at all in fact, to prosper in something you believe in and love makes a person strive and live fully in even the toughest times. Living a life of scrutinization by someone who is said to be better than you, and being locked away in your own head where you're not even able to think freely, can make you go insane and accept that you will not impact the world. And in 1984 you can be successful by doing just this, being nothing and accepting life the way it was already destined for you to be. Truly thriving to be a working part of their society. The book clearly shows the lesser end of freedom, it shows the absolute minimal amount of life a person can live. These people lost all freedom. They lost the ability to think freely, act freely, and pursue a passion freely.
It can be hard to think …show more content…

Being able to pursue a dream or stand for something that you feel strongly about is crucial essence of freedom. In 1984 writing can be deadly. Winston would drink his Gin and smoke his Victory cigarettes and sometimes he’d gain the strength to write in his journal. He needed this strength because he knew that if he was caught he would endure “... the crack of broken bones, the smashed teeth, and bloody clots of hair.”(Orwell 58). He knew the consequences but he wanted to feel free so he wrote anyways. He may have lied, felt it was harmless, thought he would never be caught, but in all honestly he knew what was going to come from his writing. He knew he had no freedom and that “ nobody ever escaped detection, and nobody ever failed to confess”(Orwell 58). Winston wished this upon himself, that’s what an oceania resident would definitely say. The whole population was brainwashed with no idea of freedom but Winston for some reason was different he felt alive when he was

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