Should There Be Comrades In The Book 1984 By George Orwell

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“Don’t do that. I command you to stop. Stand behind each other, clasp your hands behind your head, and face forward.” The Party and Big Brother are incessantly observing and analyzing comrades. Examining comrades of anything suspicious, unpatriotic or perfidious towards the Party. They accurately know everything. In fact, they are aware of what you ate for dinner, comrades you associated with, the things you verbalized, etc. Making it impossible to have any form of privacy. The higher authority can keep absolute power by arranging various technologies throughout Oceania, so they have the authority to control, monitor, and suppress comrades which is detrimental to comrades and beneficial to the higher power. One significant symbol in the novel is the …show more content…

Additionally, comrades are constantly being surveilled by the telescreen in public, at work, and even at social events. The telescreen is used to persistently monitor comrades …show more content…

They place these microphones all throughout Oceania to ensure that every comrade monitored is completely orthodox. The microphones are used to pick up sounds/voices of comrades, specifically those who are verbalizing ideas against or that are disloyal to the Party.”...you could not assume that you were much safer in the country than in London. There were no telescreens, of course, but there was always the danger of concealed microphones by which your voice might be picked up and recognized” (Pg. 148). Comrades are aware that they are being recorded, but are unaware of when the Thought Police are actually listening. Additionally, they are unaware of the placement of microphones. The thought of not knowing when the Thought Police is actually listening in makes it more frightening to the comrades. Everywhere comrades go, they are being monitored. The surveillance is not

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