Language as an oppressive device in Orwell's 1984. bakhtiar hama. Abstract This paper is a critical study of “1984”, a novel by George Orwell. It specifically aims to study how language is used by the dominant authority in the fiction to oppress and to exert power over the population in the country. The analysis focuses on how the
Analysis and discussion of Winston Smith in George Orwell's 1984. Premium PDF. Download the entire 1984 study guide as a printable PDF!You can‟t help it. They torture you” (Orwell 173). But, Julia replies: “Confession is not betrayal. What you say or do doesn‟t matter: only feelings matter” (Orwell 173). It would seem that O‟Brien, too, shares that view: “When finally you surrender to us, it must be of your own free will” (Orwell 267).The people in the crowd blamed their anti-Eurasia signs on sabotage by Emmanuel Goldstein's agents. For five days Winston works around the clock. The Party once again demonstrates its power over reality, completely flipping, in a single day, a single instant, its enemy and ally. Yet while such power to manipulate history gives the party power
George Orwell's dystopian masterpice "1984" (1949), has been the subject of many university student's debate over the past few years in Venezuela. Through this presentation, some of the most important aspects of his literary prose.
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