|
Term Paper Categories
American History
Anatomy
Physiology
Animal Science
Anthropology
Architecture
Arts
Astronomy
Aviation
Beauty
Biographies
Book Reports
Business
Computers
Creative Writing
Current Events
Economics
Education
Engineering
English
Environmental
Ethics
European History
Foreign Languages
Geography
Government
Politics
Health
History
Human Sexuality
Legal Issues
Marketing
Mathematics
Medicine
Miscellaneous
Movies
Television
Music
Mythology
Philosophy
Physics
Poetry
Political Science
Psychology
Religion
Science
Shakespeare
Social Issues
Sociology
Speech
Sports
Recreation
Supernatural
Technology
Theater
Zoology
|
1984: The Control Of Reality For Control Of The Masses
| Term Paper Title | 1984: The Control Of Reality For Control Of The Masses |
| # of Words | 1062 |
| # of Pages (250 words per page double spaced) | 4.25 |
1984: The Control of Reality for Control of the Masses
3 KEY POINTS:
1. The Party Controls History
2. The Party Controls the Conditions of Human Psychology
3. The Party Controls god.
How The Party Controls Reality:
How does the party controls history?
How does it affect the present?
How does scarcity affect human psychology?
What role does Big Brother play?
Outline:
Introduction:
State Topics: The Party Controls Reality to control the people
It controls History, Psychology and god.
Paragraph 1: History: Explain Revisionism
Its Process
How it affects the present
Paragraph 2: Psychology: Artificial Scarcity: Affects human behavior
Maslow Theory of Human behavior
Paragraph 3: God: Big Brother has taken the place of God: Omnipotent and
Omniscient, and under the control of the party
Among the many themes express in the novel 1984 by George Orwell the
most interesting and frightening is the concept of creating an alternative
reality to control a mass population. The Inner Party stays in power by shaping
the thoughts and opinions of the masses and it does this by creating a reality
where everything suits whatever it is the party needs to be believed. This is
accomplished in three ways. The first is revisionism or the act of changing
facts such as history so that the Party is always made to look good and mobilize
popular opinion against its enemies. The second way the party creates an
artificial reality is through artificial scarcity. There is no need for the
constant warfare but if the need no longer existed for the construction of the
tools of war that productivity would instead be put towards the manufacture of
goods which could actually raise the standard of living. Finally the Inner
Party controls the masses by creating an all powerful omnipotent being whom they
contr ol and can say or order whatever it is they need.
Much of the success in creating the Parties artificial reality and thus
controlling the people was due to the Parties ability to control history through
a process called revisionism. This work is done in the Ministry of Truth, in the
Records section, were Winston is engaged. Daily, people like Winston, destroy
old documents and create new ones to cover policy changes. In addition,
everything printed before 1960 has been destroyed by the Party. A good example
of this is the work which Winston has to do in the Minitru one day. His order in
Newspeak reads: "time e.12.83 reporting bb dayorder doubleplusungood refs
unpersons rewrite fullwise upsub antefiling." (46) in Oldspeak: "The reporting
of Big Brother`s Order for the day in the Times of December 3rd 1983 is
extremely unsatisfactory and makes references to non-existent persons. Re-write
in full and submit your draft to higher authority before filing." (47) A former
higher Inner Party hero, praised in one of Big Brother's speeches, has
mysteriously fallen out of favor, and has probably been vaporized. It is not
enough that the Thought Police has made him disappear. He must be removed from
the records. According to the Party he has never existed - he is an Unperson.
This process of continuous alteration is applied not only to newspapers, but
also to books, periodicals, pamphlets, posters, leaflets, films, sound-tracks,
ca...Read entire document
|
|
|