Conflict in Geroge Orlwell Drasitic Novels

745 Words3 Pages
How is conflict explored by Orwell in 1984 and what impact does it have on the reader. The book, 1984 is written by George Orwell, it is about the conflict between Winston Smith and Big Brother; and the conflict between the two ideas, democracy and totalitarianism. Orwell wrote the novel to show society what it could become if things kept getting worse he identified of the expansion of communism when he wrote the novel. The conflict between democracy and totalitarianism created two characters, Winston Smith and Big Brother, in Orwell’s mind. Big Brother is the example of all the ideals of the totalitarian party. In compare to Big Brother, Winston Smith keeps the idea of democracy underlines freedom; he has to hide his own thought because the Big Brother's party will punish him by death if the party finds it out. George Orwell evaluates of Big Brother's society by describing it as a dark and a gloomy place. It warns that people might believe that everyone must become slaves to the government in order to have an orderly society, but at the expense of the freedom of the people The super-country of Oceania is in a constant state of war in which the novel 1984 is set in, and bomb explosions are omnipresent. The living conditions are poor – very poor – with the buildings broken-down, the food artificial and rationed out, wages poor, and clothing cheap. One cannot expect privacy anywhere, as there is a telescreen in almost every room. Certainly a setting to make a character feel unhappy. In the novel 1984 Orwell uses conflict against characters and appearance vs. reality and there is the biggest conflict which is Big Brother this is what the book is set about that he is always watching over everyone day in and day out. Other examples are: The three world authorities, Oceania, Eurasia and East Asia are in constant conflict so that their populations don't become

More about Conflict in Geroge Orlwell Drasitic Novels

Open Document