YOU WERE LOOKING FOR :Totalitarianism Themes in 1984 by George Orwell
Essays 61 - 90
the human omnipotence and the genuinely powerless. The books grim analysis of totalitarianisms origin leads the author to ass...
She is right in this evaluation. During the Second World War, the U.S. supported Japanese internment camps. It was something that ...
from a class structure to a more business structure. But the costs of doing so, she notes, were far beyond what a government could...
satisfying sexual or intimate relationship because of it. She essentially lived a life wherein she was torn between the desire to ...
freedom for the sake of wealth and power. As mentioned, many see this work as a novel that encourages true socialist societies. ...
The ruler was seen as Gods representative on earth and his use of absolute power was justified by his receiving the right to rule ...
Blair family was not very wealthy - Orwell later described them ironically as lower-upper-middle class" and "They owned no propert...
entities take liberties and make rules that do not abide by the clear-cut convictions of a democratic system of administration. ...
there. This is further evidenced by another critic who indicates how, ""George Orwell actually was indeed a policeman in Burma in ...
Acquiescing to pressure from his father to also become a member of the Imperial Service, Orwell joined Burmas Imperial Police in 1...
the exchange of information as well as a press that is free to investigate, and even criticize, its government. These freedoms are...
through a symbolic manner, as it involves language. He notes, "The great enemy of clear language is insincerity. When there is a g...
In eight pages the ways in which British imperialism is featured in George Orwell's debut novel are examined in tersm of oppressio...
In 6 pages this paper discusses the intellectual and political themes that were featured in the essays of George Orwell. Nine sou...
In five pages the transformation of George Orwell's novel from text to film is discussed and compared with other books such as Wat...
This paper addresses various literary works relating to human behavior and society. The author discusses George Orwell's work Sho...
front panel." Kozierok (2001) also explains that the term "external drive bay" is a "bit of a misnomer" in that the term ex...
instead, have served to almost break mens spirits. He seems to have been illustrating the immense danger a political system could ...
farmer, the oppressor. However, once the pigs were in place and the rules established, the farm animals found themselves under a...
Orwell dao.htm). In "Road to Wigan Pier" we are presented with a much more specific culture it would seem, the culture of miner...
them on their journey to death are, more often than not, lacking in any sympathy or emotion, just as the characters in the end of ...
the animals and they all break out, running to the house where the food is kept. Mr. Jones discovers what has happened and he trie...
in Burma. It is a poignant and ironic allegory of British imperialism, for in Orwells view, the authority which enabled the gover...
fair and easy (yet deceitful) life of communism. How does George Orwell relate all of this to animals, however? As George Orwe...
In five pages this paper examines social revolution as depicted in this novel and film. There is 1 source cited in the bibliograp...
conditioned to blindly follow the directives of Big Brother. For the people, double-speak was perfectly acceptable, and soon they...
he would not be getting any scholarships for furthering his education, he "joined the Indian Imperial Police Burma" (George Orwell...
farm listens to him and believes him and looks up to him. "Word had gone round during the day that old Major, the prize Middle Whi...
truths with incredible power. For example, Hitler used language in an incredibly powerful way, playing on the truths of the people...
existence is it considered more equal than others, which is why ants are stepped on with careless effort, a milk cow is destroyed ...