The constant mistreatment and complete domination of the totalitarian leadership is continually expressed in George Orwell’s novel, 1984. Orwell conveys the dehumanisation which is experienced through the continuous oppression and manipulation of regular human emotions, as well as the impacts on emotions for those under the rule of Big Brother. The dystopian society, in which Winston lives, is an oppressive state where ‘nothing was your own’, leading to the complete ‘disassembly[y] of your feelings,’ and the ‘control of your face,’ which was considered ‘an instinctive reaction.’ This impulsive act, is used as a means to express the complete control of Insoc within Oceania, and how the omnipresent Big Brother, has absolute power over the thoughts …show more content…
Yet, Orwell considers the implications of resistance towards this control, and exerts the importance of having a safe space which allows for freedom of expression within the heavily controlled society. Winston and Julia’s love affair within Mr Charrington’s shop is an important moment in which Winston converses his absolute act of resistance towards the party and signifies the room as a ‘pocket of the past where extinct animals could walk.’ The quote also begins to give the understanding that there may be some hope for Winston within that point in time and allows for him to feel a deeper and more human sense of connection despite knowing the punishments of being caught. This foreshadowing of the later death of the couple's mental freedom is used to show that the two begin to regain their humanity, which had been previously taken by the party. The room is seen through the eyes of Winston as a safe space, in which they are protected from any eyes of the party, especially as there is believed to be no telescreen within the