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1984 George Orwell Essay

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Misery and dictatorship at the hands of government is a part of many countries’ history. Some governments of the past are guilty of being oppressive, such as the Nazi regime in Germany, during World War II. In George Orwell’s novel, 1984, the government of the Party uses similar tactics. The government of the Party in George Orwell’s novel, 1984, is very similar to the totalitarian leadership of Adolf Hitler and his Nazis in terms of their use of manipulation, power, and violence. 1984 discusses the historical influences, background of George Orwell, themes and purpose, as well as open its readers to the perspectives during the aftermath of the war.
Orwell’s journey toward writing the infamous 1984 began during the Spanish Civil War. As a socialist, Orwell joined the Spanish Civil War, fighting with the leftist against Fascism. This experience not only …show more content…

Orwell was an essayist, English novelist, and critic famous for his novels Animal Farm (1945) and 1984 (1949), both of which are intellectual anti-utopian novels that analyze the threats of totalitarian power. In 1927, Orwell resigned from the imperial police and began on his path to find his individuality as a writer. He submerged himself in the life of the outcast and of Europe. He went into the East End of London, clothed in worn-out attire, to live in cheap among beggars and workers in houses; he spent a period working as a dishwasher in French restaurants and hotel, living in the slums of Paris. In with these experiences and out came many writes like: Down and Out in Paris and London, Keep the Aspidistra Flying, Burmese Days, and A Clergyman’s Daughter. In the midst of World War II, he slowly emerged himself into a socialist mindset, bringing Animal Farm (1945) to the world, and although this was one of Orwell’s finest works, it was soon overshadowed by his final book

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