As an opposition to utopia- a society that is conceived to be perfect, dystopia describes a society that is as dehumanizing as possible. George Orwell, in his renowned dystopian novel, Nineteen-Eighty-Four, enhances the theme of dystopia through a society called Oceania. Orwell describes Oceania as a place where the Party scrutinizes the citizens’ actions in order to keep them under an absolute control of the all-seeing Big Brother, the figurehead. Citizens live under the definitive control of Big Brother which tends to weed out any act of public rebellion. If the Thought Police- who arrests people for committing a thought crime- or the Party catches one’s suspicious action or even an unusual glimpse of facial expression, one might be vaporized and all the records about him/her will be clearly obliterated as well. George Orwell depicts a dystopian society, Oceania, where it contains all of the dystopian characteristics, …show more content…
Living under the Party’s control innahiliates the citizens’ privacy at all time. The telescreen, a futuristic element Orwell portrays as a tool for the Party to keep their eyes on the individuals, projects the face of Big Brother and announces the military news about wars or the propaganda. Citizens are perceived to be under constant surveillance which aids the Party in arresting thought criminals by screening the simultaneous image of individuals. The Party uses propaganda in order to seize the citizens’ minds. It increases their morale and makes them think that what they Party tells them is always right. An example of a propaganda in Oceania is the Party’s slogan,