Examples Of Utopia In George Orwell's '1984'

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1984
The utopian novel, “1984,” George Orwell dives into detail about the dehumanization of the everyday person. The society is built like a pyramid the inner party, the outer party, and the parolees. The paroles take up most of the population. The party takes away privacy , stigma against sex, and words limit the ideas of the people of Oceania. Big Brother leads utopia, he will never die because he was never real in the first place. But the main focus of the society is to only desire Big Brother and all the “good” he brings to Oceana. The main character Winston is a member of the outer party. He works in the ministry of truth in the records department. Winston claims responsibility for the history of Oceania.The ideal citizen of Oceania is represented by this quote, “Comrade Ogilvy ,refusing all toys except a drum and a machine gun. Denouncing his own uncle to the thought police.. Becoming a district organizer of the junior sex league ..killed thirty-one, Euro-asian men.” (47) Winston creates a fictional story in which the main character, Comrade Ogilvy will be idolized by future parolees.“Comrade Ogilvy’s life, unimagined an hour ago , was now a
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In 1984 , the government's attempts to control not only the speech but the actions of the parolees. An attempt to control people's thought is by creating a new language were the vocabulary gets smaller each year. Nonetheless, Winston craves to express his feelings on paper about the things he has seen and done is Oceana. Writing in journals is considered dangerous for reflecting the desires knowing,“Thoughtcrime does not entail death; though crime is death.” (27) Having any kind of desire sexually or denouncing loyalty the party is a crime against big brother. Any desire can be used as a rebellion. Later on, Winston thrives on going against the party. By using sex as a way to show big brother that he doesn’t follow his