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George Orwell's Nineteen Eighty-Four 1984

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The Robots of 1984
In the first half of 1984, the Party is revealed in a way that shows how much control they have over London, Oceania. The Party is the people underneath Big Brother who carry out the orders of Big Brother. No one is allowed to think anything but for the good of the Party and what they believe in. George Orwell tells the reader how power and loyalty are very strong concepts to this ambitious group of people by illustrating how manipulative and deceiving the Party can be if they truly want something. The Party alienates its citizens to break off any relationship that might threaten the Party’s existence, resulting in no real friends, strong child loyalty, and an uneven power balance.
In order to keep the people from rebelling, the Party has removed all concepts of friends, and replaces it with ‘comrades’. As Winston is talking with his neighbor, Mrs. Parsons, he clarifies that, “you [are] supposed to call everyone ‘comrade’” (21). By removing all trace of friends, it allows people to see others as they truly are, …show more content…

These people are being deprived from any flicker of power that they might have. All of the power and control is going straight up to the Inner-circle of the Party, making them obsessive with this idea of complete domination. They are taking millions of people and rewriting their histories just so that it benefits the Party’s existence. Everything of the past is being destroyed just so they cannot be challenged by the ideas before them. Winston understands this uneven balance and while working one day, he realizes that “all history [is] a palimpsest, scraped clean and reinscribed exactly as often as necessary” (41). These Inner-Party members are so desperate for control over the people around them, that they feel it is necessary for them to create and destroy people from existence so long as it benefits the Party and Big

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