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1984 Dystopian

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Everyone fears something. Fear is one of the many things that makes us human. Dystopian novels bring to life one of the most common fears, the future. Not all dystopian novels are about the futuristic version of society, but most are. They are what argue that we, as a society, need to be aware and be careful about the choices and actions we make so that our society does not become a dystopia, which is an imagined place in which everything about the place is unpleasant and a lot of the things that make us human are not there. The novel 1984 by George Orwell, a dystopian novel about a man by the name of Winston living in a society where his and everyone else’s moves are all seen by the government. Winston starts to question the society he is …show more content…

The people of the society may think it’s actually a good because of influence from the government. The society was controlling: “It was impossible to do otherwise. To dissemble your feelings, to control your face, to do what everyone else was doing, was an instinctive reaction”(17). The people of the harsh society in 1984 did not know how bad their society was, except for Winston and others like him. Big Brother keeps his power by using force and keeping everyone thinking the same so that he does not lose power. Phrases such as “DOWN WITH BIG BROTHER”(18), are used as a way to make everyone follow in order. Big Brother does not want people to think differently or else he thinks there will be chaos. This influence that Big Brother has over the citizens is crucial to the idea of their society being thought of by them as …show more content…

The article discusses the elements of a society that has fallen and is now a horrible place to live in. Lepore states “Dystopias follow utopias the way thunder follows lightning. This year, the thunder is roaring. But people are so grumpy, what with the petty tyrants and such, that it’s easy to forget how recently lightning struck.” The lighting is used to personify the good and the thunder is used to personify the bad. Sometimes we forget to look on the good side of things when there's so much worse. There is the idea of the relationship between adolescence and dystopias: “Dystopianism turns out to have a natural affinity with American adolescence” (Lepore). Novels that include dystopian aspects of their society are reminders and warnings for the

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