Who Is The Protagonist In The Novel 1984

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1984 Literary Novel
In the dystopian future of 1984 the world is controlled by three totalitarian states that control their citizens through consistent propaganda in their homes and the ever looming fear of the ‘thought police’. Winston Smith, a party member of Oceania once Great Britain, is the protagonist in the novel 1984 by George Orwell. Winston is George Orwell’s definition of heroism as a everyday man doing what he can to fight the system and having the power to think for himself and help the oppressed citizens of Oceania.
Throughout the novel, Winston Smith defies the Big Brother Party and commits crimes. “He had given a quick glance up and down the street and then had slipped inside and bought the book for two dollars fifty . . . He carried it guiltily home in his …show more content…

Even with nothing written in it, it was a comprising possession,” (book 1, chapter 1, page 6). Winston Smith goes into the hide away and writes in his diary in the one part of the house where he can not be observed by ‘Big Brother’ and commits ‘thought crimes’. Winston Smith began to write in his diary, “DOWN WITH BIG BROTHER” regardless of the known consequences, showing his desire to be free of the party and have control over his own thoughts and desires, but shows that he still fears the Party and their Thought Police. “Theyll shoot me i dont care theyll shoot me in the back of the neck i don’t care down with big brother they always shoot you in the back of the neck i dont care down big brother--” (book 1, chapter 1, page 19). Winston Smith is acting against the Big Brother Party with the writing in his diary. While it goes undetected in the first few chapters in the novel, he defies the Big Brother Party and the inhumanity the Big Brother Party stood for. Winston Smith writes in the dairy about the sex laws in the Big Brother Party. “Unlike

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