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Uniformity In 1984

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Throughout the novel 1984, George Orwell describes a society that functions on uniformity. In order to maintain this, modifications have been forced upon aspects of their lives. This includes the banning of words in their dictionary, convincing change throughout history, and even eradicating the idea of having human emotions. In modern-day society, the freedom of speech and expression are valuable and encourage individualism amongst others. Because of this, the danger of government censorship becomes clear as the importance of access to diverse perspectives and information is communicated. George Orwell uses the corrupt society of 1984 to examine the importance of our freedom of speech and expression by showing the downside to government censorship and how it …show more content…

The first slogan signifies how members of society can not rebel because they are forced to believe that war is peaceful. They have been told that the war has been ongoing for years and have been brainwashed to forget about anything before the war as a means to keep people from wondering about the truth. The next slogan shows how individuals are not allowed to be independent and will fail if they are. The party wants its members to feel that they are already free, so there is no reason to rebel. The last slogan completely encapsulates censorship throughout as it shows that the party feels people are more powerful if they have no knowledge of the things happening around them. Because the society within 1984 has no freedom of individuality, it becomes clear immediately the importance of these in aspects of our own lives. As Winston recalls the past, “He, Winston Smith, knew that Oceania had been in alliance with Eurasia for a short time of four years. But where did that knowledge exist? Only in his own consciousness, which in any case must soon be annihilated,” (pg

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