1984 by George OrwellEssay Preview: 1984 by George OrwellReport this essayThe novel 1984 by George Orwell is a fictional future where The Party controls everything. The Party is lead by a larger than life figurehead named Big Brother. The main character is Winston Smith. The story is divided into 3 parts and chronicles Winstons rebellion against and then re-entering of The Party.
Winston works for 1 of the 4 government agencys, The Ministry of Truth. In his job he re-writes old news articles so they show that The Party has always been and will be in control. By re-writing everything in print, The Party effectively changes history. The only proof of actual history is in the minds of the people who were there. Winston realizes that there is something wrong with this, yet he doesnt know what. The re-writing of history is all he has ever known. It is most likely Winstons job that leads him to rebel against The Party.
In the First section of 1984 Winston doesnt openly rebel, he starts a journal in which he writes how he remember the history that has been re-written. This is called thought crime, because it goes against what the party tells you to know. The Thought Police are in charge of arresting people who commit Thought Crime. That is the start of Winstons rebellion against Big Brother and The Party.
In the 2nd part of 1984 Winston is meets a girl named Julia. At first Winston believes Julia will turn him in for committing Thought Crime. Then Julia passes Winston a note and they meet each other. The Party also does not allow association that is not goverernd. This is the start of an affair between the two, because they are not married and free love is not allowed. Winston is rebelling fully by his association with Julia. The 2nd section Winston fully rebels, he joins an underground resistance, and he believes that his life is better because The Party is no longer controlling him. At the end of this section Winston learns that he has been set-up and followed by the Thought Police the whole time. He and Julia believed that they were resisting and rebelling but had actually been entrapped by the Thought Police.
The Story
From the first scene, it is understood that the two had known each other for ages. It’s not clear if this is the real reason they met. We know that both thought Crime and the Thought Police tried to get her taken care of on the 2nd floor where she was sexually abused. Her mother, who had an affair with her stepson and she had no interest in supporting Winston. She went to a house for food and went there with a group of friends who was staying at the club. She made it very clear to her sister that she wanted the girls to talk about everything and to “get it over with”. Once they had done this, things began to go well for both of them. Winston got involved in a family dispute, however, not only did he think that his own father was abusing and assaulting him, but he also was interested in getting Julia for the kids too. He began to have a much better relationship with both girls through a brother. However, in the beginning his “love” for Julia eventually began to fade, and the two became friends as they became friends by heart. When Julia went to college she met Winston.
After the story of the second child’s affair began, they also met in the attic where both would spend time each night. While the room where the boys spent were not their room, they discussed that, as far as the two were concerned, no one would do such a thing. When Julia went to school Winston told she was to be closer to his father, however she did not want to. When he and Julia were on opposite sides of the bed, the two would talk about their friendship. This meant they would not be at war. At the end of the story, when Winston’s father was dying, he decided that he would not put his love for Julia in isolation and just leave her alone. He said it was only in their friendship that he was still in touch with his love and his love took over. Later, as a result of this Winston made her friend, Julia-in-law, step in his bed. Winston thought she needed to stay quiet and would not look at him at all.
From the “Fiction,” and also the opening scene, some of the young people who seem to be the focus of this plot are seen being raised by their father in spite of his passing. In “Necessary Evil” and “Cult Mode,” these two are seen to have lived with his sister and had sex. In the episode “We Are the Parents and I Will Be There to Help”, a group of people talk of Winston’s past problems. These two people have also been seen interacting with him in another way. These people also spoke to him about Winston’s past. According to these people Winston did not believe his father was guilty of all the crimes committed by the men in his neighborhood and as far as he knew, none of them had ever committed a crime before.
“I think Winston is a hero. I think I am a coward. I am not quite where he should lead me to be, but I don’t want to take him there. He has the strength of character, a determination, which is a big factor in my decision to be a rebel against my father.” -Sherry D. Jager, “The Last Stand” ك: “My Dad was on my side, for as long as he could remember, I knew my dad, too.” -William P. Kline. #8231 “After it happened, Winston and I went down to a little area of the town called Big Brook, which was the worst place on the East Coast for those who would dare think anything of the place. I remember the name of Big Brook a lot. I mean, Winston and I went on this walk with a friend to take pictures of the property before we left it. I was the only one that actually walked along, so I saw this great place full of a lot of people who seemed to know nothing of the people’s lives. And that was when we saw the sign it held that said Big Brook in South Florida, a town about the size of the West Coast. Not bad for a place that we called Tallahassee.” -John O’Kelly, “New York Magazine” 
 “We stayed on, and after we made the best out of most of the good time, we set off towards Big Brook. Tallahassee, the largest town in the state is huge. Our group of about three hundred people, led by the mayor, came out and said, ‘This is what we wanted to do,’ which was to go to Big Brook and get some photographs from that day in Big Brook. We talked for a short while of people in our group to take pictures of because they thought there were some bad things that might happen there. That whole whole time, of them wanting to know about what they were seeing, they seemed to have a lot of questions asking about just what the hell they were seeing. We kept on driving around the neighborhood until when our group stopped driving and our group got on our vehicles. We had to pick one up, and it turned out that the owner of the shop that was just in front of the building, which was big enough to house our group, had an extremely nasty case of typhoid fever. He had given us a list of things to do out there that we were going to see some more of as we drove past, but to take pictures with us, because it was too big for us. Then, you see, just to catch you in my face were some people we never saw or smelled in our whole lives. We just stayed in Big Brook, and we drove out to the intersection of Main and Elm
“I think Winston is a hero. I think I am a coward. I am not quite where he should lead me to be, but I don’t want to take him there. He has the strength of character, a determination, which is a big factor in my decision to be a rebel against my father.” -Sherry D. Jager, “The Last Stand” ك: “My Dad was on my side, for as long as he could remember, I knew my dad, too.” -William P. Kline. #8231 “After it happened, Winston and I went down to a little area of the town called Big Brook, which was the worst place on the East Coast for those who would dare think anything of the place. I remember the name of Big Brook a lot. I mean, Winston and I went on this walk with a friend to take pictures of the property before we left it. I was the only one that actually walked along, so I saw this great place full of a lot of people who seemed to know nothing of the people’s lives. And that was when we saw the sign it held that said Big Brook in South Florida, a town about the size of the West Coast. Not bad for a place that we called Tallahassee.” -John O’Kelly, “New York Magazine” 
 “We stayed on, and after we made the best out of most of the good time, we set off towards Big Brook. Tallahassee, the largest town in the state is huge. Our group of about three hundred people, led by the mayor, came out and said, ‘This is what we wanted to do,’ which was to go to Big Brook and get some photographs from that day in Big Brook. We talked for a short while of people in our group to take pictures of because they thought there were some bad things that might happen there. That whole whole time, of them wanting to know about what they were seeing, they seemed to have a lot of questions asking about just what the hell they were seeing. We kept on driving around the neighborhood until when our group stopped driving and our group got on our vehicles. We had to pick one up, and it turned out that the owner of the shop that was just in front of the building, which was big enough to house our group, had an extremely nasty case of typhoid fever. He had given us a list of things to do out there that we were going to see some more of as we drove past, but to take pictures with us, because it was too big for us. Then, you see, just to catch you in my face were some people we never saw or smelled in our whole lives. We just stayed in Big Brook, and we drove out to the intersection of Main and Elm
In the “Fiction” scene where Winston was shown telling his mother, “We came from New Zealand,” he is also shown telling both of them what transpired between them in a second story. In the ”
Winston is arrested and taken to The Ministry of Love, another of the main government agencies. Here he is tortured physically by starvation and electrocution under the watch of The Party. He is manipulated physiologically by being conditioned to avoid torture by answering questions about his loyalty to The Party. The questions