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Totalitarianism In George Orwell's 1984

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“1984” is a dystopian fiction novel by George Orwell, which displays a totalitarian society where the government of Oceania also known as ‘the Party’ has full authority of its citizen’s freedom. They accomplish this by manipulating them psychologically, historically, and with slogans and propaganda under a symbolic figure called Big Brother. Being a part of the Outer Party, Winston Smith experiences passionate resentment towards the Party’s views and how it manages the past. A crucial apparatus known as the Thought Police is used by the Party to psychologically suppress their citizen’s natural reactions to situations, emotions, and their relationships and communication with others. This suppression is suggested as making everyone less human …show more content…

They accomplished this by using telescreens to monitor the citizens and watch their body language to decipher their thoughts. “ people who had the displeasure of the Party simply disappeared ”, meaning after they were arrested their fate was to be killed off and erased from existence (Orwell 44). The prime way to go unnoticed was to not think at all or to simply double think. Syme mentioned that, "Orthodoxy means not thinking—not needing to think” (53). If people do not think, they cannot be caught by the Thought Police with negative thoughts because they are not thinking of anything bad to begin with. This is the psychological intimidation formulated from the Thought Police that drove everyone to rethink what they do, so the best solution is to silence one's thoughts. Although, if everyone stops thinking, the elements of conversation could be affected in a way that an individual couldn’t fabricate their own words to describe what they are thinking within their conversation; as a result being dehumanized. If this were to conspire downwards, the english language will sooner become

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