Unlike a sun behind the clouds, the rays of hope in the battle between Winston and the Party are not concealed, but rather undoubtedly extinguished by the end. In the book 1984 by George Orwell, Winston Smith. a bureaucrat in IngSoc, and his lover Julia question and resist the dogmas of the Party in which freedom and truth do not exist. In this society the practice of “doublethink” inherently weakens the man, breaking his grasp of common sense and sanity by believing wholeheartedly one claim one moment, and a completely contradictory statement when told. Winston and Julia cannot express his thoughts and ideology in a corrupt society, and end up capitulating to O’Brien’s manipulation. In 1984, Winston Smith forges historical records to reflect …show more content…
The propaganda she tapes to public places completely contradicts her lust and love for Winston, and expressing her sexuality is how she rebels against the society. Also, the narrator says, “Talking to her, he realized how easy it was to present an appearance of orthodoxy while having no grasp whatever of what orthodoxy meant” (Orwell 156). Essentially, Julia would rather keep under the Thought Police’s radar, sleeping with comrades, and displaying the persona they expect than violently overthrow an all-powerful force and risk her lifestyle. Because of her hobby, Julia is relatively skillful in avoiding telescreens that permit the Party to carry out surveillance in homes, workplaces, and public spaces. In any case, the telescreen behind the painting in Mr Charrington’s upstairs bedroom shatters the bubble of peace and intimacy Julia and Winston had. Despite attempts to evade the Party through community service and orthodox appearances, the Party had all the cards in their hand from the …show more content…
Beneath the appearance of obedience, the protagonists are unable to communicate their thoughts and desires at the risk of their society punishing them; Winston wants intellectual freedom and Julia wants sexual freedom. Also, O’Brien pretend to be kind to the main characters until they step out of line—at which point O’Brien brainwashes every shred of Winston’s pride and logical reasoning out of him so that he would truly love Big Brother (Orwell 298). Although Winston and Julia start 1984 idealistic and tenacious, the Party regime twists them so thoroughly that upon re-entry into public life, they feel no desire to date again (292) or think for themselves (288). To exert maximum power over the people, the Party grooms its appearance as all-powerful, rewrites reality, and crushes dissidents. When the Party can invade every private space, nowhere is