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1984 part three
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Jul 01, 2012 12:37PM

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Spoilers are ok in this section since anyone posting in this section should have finished the book. :)




The point Orwell probably wanted to drive home was that Winston no longer has any free will at all. As Shannon put it, it just shows how little control we have.

His fate is perfect. If he were simply killed or locked away we could have still thought of his actions as successful on some level, dying for what he believed in or suffering for what he believed in. I think I was expecting one of those two endings. But he betrays himself by betraying Julia. Actually being killed is really meaningless after that. Orwell so brilliantly makes you realize that you are not defeated when they control your body, but when they control your will.
I didn't blame Winston for giving in, I don't think most people reading it will. And it leaves you with the question, is everyone corruptible in some circumstance? If they are what is Orwell saying about our ability to stand for what we believe? Or even the existence of free will.
I, too felt some disappointment that Winston didn't win in the end, but then I thought about myself in the same circumstances and not sure exactly what I would have done. I guess we all want our stories to end happy with the hero winning, but this is not the world we live in and not the world Winston lived in either.


Why did the author choose to end the book the way it did, with Winston finally loving Big Brother? What is the point?
And why was he released? I thought he was supposed to be killed inevitably. Are we to assume that Winston after the end of the novel, is soon to be dragged into the Ministry of Love and then killed, since now he loves Big Brother?

I don't think Winston was killed after being released. In the end, he was a shell of a human being anyway- why bother?
The Party survived not by eradicating people, but by eradicating ideas. Killing Winston would have been the easy option. Instead, they tortured Winston until he lost all sense of free will. He was still alive, yes, but he was a mere shadow of his former self.
I don't read too much into his 'loving' Big Brother either. What other choice did he have? Love requires free will. Winston didn't have any.

But I'd rather say that the idea of the Party is that in reality there is no self to have or leave a shadow. Winston is a nobody, leaving nothing behind.
The book does not specify whether Winston is killed namely because it's all the same if he's dead or alive.


My theory may be wayyyy out there, but that's what I think!

The government broke Winston's spirit when they terrified him into betraying Julia. By allowing him to remain free for a while, it was like saying: "You're so impotent now, we couldn't care less if you walk around for a while. You're dead anyway." Remember, early in the narrative we learn of rebels who are killed a year or two after being detained and released.
Also, allowing a reprogrammed rebel to walk around free for a while could serve two practical functions: (1) to reassure loyal citizens who might suspect that such a person was a rebel that, no, he does love Big Brother, as you do; and (2) to break the spirit of those who seek a rebel hero to follow, as Winston himself did.
"We are the dead."
"We are the dead."
"You are the dead."



To be sure, Julie: Reducing former rebels to walking shadows represents the total crushing of the rebel spirit.
You're right about the methods of 1984 being with us today. In America, they are put in the service of selling every kind of product -- including politicians! In politics, as we see constantly, the rewriting of history and the constant repetition of dubious statements are favorite tactics (thus the terrible implications of unlimited corporate spending on campaigns). Without freedom of speech to counteract these manipulations, our geese would be cooked indeed!

I agree with you Cordelia.
And, no, who could blame Winston? The Party knew his deepest fear and exploited it. Few could withstand such terror.


He is an imperfect part of a state that functions perfectly. They will make him perfect before they disincorporate him from the cogs of history that they control.

I found Winston's (not sure the word Im looking for here) love for O'Brien interesting. I wish we knew more about O'Brien.
Was Winston really allowed to go and work and drink at the Chestnut Tree Cafe, or was that a dream?
I have a new fear of rats. I actually had a nightmare the night I finished the book that I was about to have the rat mask put on me. *shudder*
I was not surprised that Julia and Winston betrayed each other. I was more disappointed in O'Brien.

I found Winston's (not sure the wo..."
Hi Allison, I'm interested in why you would be disappointed in O'Brien.
Personally, I love O'Brien. He's the hope and the hangman. I see him as essentially the personification of the point of view that intelligent people couldn't and wouldn't let this sort of state happen ... yet here he is, the most intelligent, erudite, and educated fellow in the whole story ... and he uses his intellect as a cold and unforgiving hammer of conformity.

Let's not forget that Orwell was writing against the backdrop of Stalin's USSR. "Uncle Joe" and other party apparatchiks professed their love for the masses, but abused their positions of power to enjoy dachas, limousines, and other luxuries. Or as Napoleon had it in Orwell's Animal Farm, "some animals were more equal than others." I don't recall (haven't read it recently), but didn't O'Brien live better than most in Oceania?
Allison wrote: "I liked the third part the best. It seemed that more was going on and I finally felt like I was engaged in the book. Some thoughts I had... in total randomness.
I found Winston's (not sure the wo..."
That same thing happened to me with the fear of rats the first time I read this book in high school. And when I reread it recently, I almost wanted to skip that part.
I found Winston's (not sure the wo..."
That same thing happened to me with the fear of rats the first time I read this book in high school. And when I reread it recently, I almost wanted to skip that part.


I found Winston's ..."
You've found your Room 101 - something so terrifying to you that you don't even have to be subjected to the torture, the fear and anticipation of it is enough to break you down by itself.

As with the fictitious government of Oceania, many oppressive regimes got their techniques from the Spanish Inquisition.

I was disappointed in how it ended because I personally wanted Winston to be able to withstand the torture he endured. However, I don't think the book would have been as successful with a "happy ending". It would have invalidated the message that Orwell was trying to get across with this book, in my opinion.

I was disappointed in how it ended because I personally wanted Winston to be able to withstand the torture he endured. However, I don't think the book would have ..."
I had hoped so Kris. However, I agree with you. I think Orwell wanted that the readers would feel that they, as citizens, could be changed easily any time, even without knowing.

Yes, he had a big apartment with luxuries and a butler. And no telescreen in the room. The spoils of power. My favorite irony of the book is how capitalist the party really is.
Overall, I really disliked this book, though. The ideas were so intense and immediate and intriguing, and I felt like the narrative itself let them down. It just got so bogged down in explanations and repetitive thoughts. I don't need butt-kicking action every second, but I feel like this book would have benefited from a little more of it. Thoughts?

What if somebody rewrote the story from O'Brien's perspective? (It would be like Grendel which tells the story of Beowulf from the point of view of the monster.) That would be very enlightening, I think. I expect he takes his life's mission very seriously.

What if somebody rewrote the story from O'Brien's perspective? (It would be like Grendel which tells th..."
That's a brilliant concept, Erin. To what extent are the O'Brien's of history true believers with idealistic intent, and to what extent selfish exploiters? I do recall that Richard Burton was compelling as O'Brien in the movie, but then again, when wasn't he?


I think it's not to get you to see them, but to break your spirit in believing and saying what you actually see. If those in authority tell you black is white, then you say it's white even if you know it's black.
A similar thing happens in Shakespeare's "Taming of the Shrew" (Act IV Scene 5) when Petrucio insists to Katherine that the moon is the sun until she agrees and then he tells her she's wrong. It's about mind control and taming of the will.


And that's what they wanted isn't it because they didn't stop when Winston first began saying it was 5. They knew he didn't believe it, so they kept on until he actually did.

I read the book in high school (eons ago) and really liked it - more for the political overtones, with Winston as the reader's lens on society and life under an oppressive regime.
It's such a good story, with rich and complex layers - yet, in some ways it was a very simple, personal story against oppression. This time I read it as Winston's story that was set against a terrifying political/structural backdrop. This shift in perspective was interesting, but it's one of the best things about great books - you can always get something new out of every reading.