Fear To Winston In George Orwell's '1984'

Words: 314
Pages: 2

Winston is deathly afraid of the Party’s proposition that there exists no external reality independent of the mind. Winston feels despair not because of the writing itself, but because he may be subject to the truth of that history. This quote makes me feel fearful to Winston because of the terrifying description, he gives of the consequences that a perpetrator against the government would receive when Winston states, “And what was terrifying was not that they would kill you for thinking otherwise, but that they might be right”(Orwell 80). In addition, this quote falls into two categories of theme which are physiological freedom and physical pain control mental actions. For example, the state of Oceania controls everything that the people hear,