The Soviet Union In George Orwell's 1984

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The novel 1984 written by George Orwell encapsulates the life of a said party member, Winston Smith, who attempted to break free from the dystopian society’s order. The Party demands total power and control over everything no matter how minuscule it may be in correlation to the entire entity. Through small acts of rebellion Winston starts going against the Party, but that is not enough for him. Once he commits himself to O’brien and the Brotherhood it is the downfall of Winston. From there he is brought to the Ministry of Love and tortured until he sees the truth of the Party and come to accept the ideology that O’brien knows, the ideology of Ingsoc. Orwell writes 1984 as a parallel to the Soviet Union with its perversion of communism. The Party’s constitution does not have a singular application as it can be seen in contemporary society. Although 1984 was published in the late 40s, the message of the …show more content…

This government is an idealized figure to its people, their savior. The Party is always at war in the sense that they are only at war so they can make their people think they are protecting them from an enemy. The dictatorship of North Korea instills faith in the system by always having a enemy to project their fear and fault onto; currently that enemy is Trump who threatens with words rather than actions. A common enemy deters the citizenry from the government reducing their food ration, while saying it has been increased. The Ministry of Truth supports the Ministry of Plenty by rewriting documents to match what Big Brother said. In the Trump administration, the term “alternative facts” is used so that what Trump says can be backed and it makes factual facts that contradict him irrelevant. New stations and the education are prominent places where the truth is viewed as one sided any other opinion is wrong especially since the motives are driven by self-interest in order to further

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