1984
N "America must be the police force for freedom in the world,"; "The Gulf War was to help the people of Kuwait,"; "Mexico started the Mexican-American war!" All three of these statements are false, yet we see these things in textbooks and our own politicians that run our country often say them. Is this a form of mind control or doublethink? Although it hasn't reached the heights it did in the novel 1984, it is one of the things Eric Blair (George Orwell) warns us about. George Orwell lived in the 1940's, so it is easy to ignore his warnings, but he has every right to warn us and foresaw things that have happened and maybe are still to come.Eric Blair was born in India, which happens to be the place that changed his career in the future. He was a very pessimistic child; at the age of 18 months he was recorded for the first time and his only word was "beastly". As a little kid he remembered thinking about writing as a career although none of it was serious (I omitted the last bit of the sentence, it's not necessary). But he did in fact keep a sort of deeply descriptive journal in his mind of everything he ever did. He went to Eton College in England where he learned of many writing techniques; of which he mostly disliked.
" All of these are true in a twisted manner. This sense of hopelessness is the book purpose. Like the example above with the illiterate militiaman singing, imagine almost a whole country acting the same way and 1984 is the result. They made a hideout in an old storekeeper's building where there was no surveillance by the party. He recalls in Homage to Catalonia how the masses were content on the revolution and how the streets were filled with the color red from the flags lining them. And finally, if you are ignorant of the truth you do not have to follow that rule; like when a child first learns to swim he is fearless of the water, but if you tried to teach an adult that has never learned they will be plagued with the fear of drowning. He volunteered with the Loyalists until he was injured and fled, but after he left he wrote a remarkable book Homage to Catalonia. The keyword in the last incidence was "scare" because fear is what unified the masses against even innocent people. The past is a very important part of the book's theme. (This sentence is confusing, could you clarify a little more?) The book 1984 is based in the U. He felt it was an "unsuitable profession," to put it nicely. All the things that he thinks were changed by the party were really typos; he never covered up the truth. He is finally "set free" or at least back into public where he becomes like everyone else and truly believes in the ideals of the party, and so the book ends hopelessly with the words "he loved Big Brother. This book basically showed how the lower classes lived and suffered in an almost comical way.
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