George Orwell's Swiftian satire 1984 (1949) exposes the dangerous potential of totalitarian regimes which exploit vulnerable individuals to maintain ubiquitous power over society. Orwell enhances audiences' understanding of human vulnerability through his representation of a totalitarian regime that disempowers its citizens and eradicates their agency. Also, he demonstrates how constant political indoctrination and intimidation create a brutalised society devoid of compassion, leaving human relationships susceptible to destruction. Furthermore, Orwell depicts the futility of rebellion against totalitarian regimes, demonstrating the vulnerability of humanity to tyrannical oppressors. In 1984. Orwell demonstrates how totalitarian regimes restrict …show more content…
The pogrom of Kristallnacht in Hitler's Germany, where German citizens rioted and looted over 7,500 Jewish businesses, epitomises a society brutalised by the Nazi Party's anti-semitic ideology. Orwell reflects this in Winston's initial diary entries of an audience's reaction to a film, in which the juxtaposition of the gruesome imagery in "he was full of holes and the sea round him turned pink" and the audiences’ enthusiastic reaction of "shouting with laughter when he sank", reveals the way violence has become normalised under the totalitarian regime and hence completely destroyed compassion. Moreover, Syme's expression of enjoyment in witnessing the hangings through the visceral imagery in "I like to …show more content…
And ... at the end tongue sticking right out" emphasises the way that individuals have become inured to violence by constant exposure to cruelty. Furthermore, through the depiction of Winston's loveless relationship with his wife Katherine in the simile "to embrace her was like embracing a jointed wooden image", Orwell highlights how the Party's control of human intimacy to ensure absolute devotion to the State has caused the disintegration of meaningful relationships. However, whilst Winston and Julia's romance serves as a symbol of the power of love to undermine the power of the state, Orwell illustrates how relationships are ultimately rendered obsolete in the metaphor "No emotion was pure, because everything was mixed up with fear and hatred", signifying how constant indoctrination has diminished individuals’ capacity for true emotional expression hence destroying their relationships. Finally, Orwell demonstrates the inevitable destruction of relationships in Winston's