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#1 |
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the beloved:
Join Date: Oct 2007
Location: Australia
Posts: 831
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Just a deterrent?
Is the reason for the Inner Party's elaborate torture and token rehabilitation of thought criminals and worse, nothing more than an expensive way to deter future unrest within the Outer Party?
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#2 |
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Love of Controvercy
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The thought procress that O'Brain outlines whilest toturing Winston is that the problem with Dictators of the past was there constant martyrizing of those who disagree or rebel against you. The problem always being that if someone rising against your power and you know that their points are possibly harmful toward your power, you need to get rid of them. But if you kill the man as opposed to killing the arguement, then your reason appears weak in the eyes of the population.
O'brain then states that to aviod this issue, the Party breaks the person from their ideals and manipulates them into no longer beleiving in them, thus when they do eventually kill that said person they can no longer be a martyr to their beliefs as they gave them up already. This is exemplified by them releasing Winston and allowing him to live his life for a while longer until he is eventually shot in the back of the head.
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A tragic situation exists precisely when virtue does not triumph but when it is still felt that man is nobler than the forces which destroy him. - Orwell In a democracy everyone has a voice, even the mute can speak, but to speak they need to VOTE!!! Read of my Shepherd |
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#3 |
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Orwellian
Join Date: Mar 2007
Location: The George Orwell sub-forum
Posts: 2,110
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Yes; although I don't think it's that expensive. It works, therefore no price is too high.
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#4 |
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the beloved:
Join Date: Oct 2007
Location: Australia
Posts: 831
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Not expensive? Think of the manpower required to sustain the surveillance and torture of Outer Party members!
Winston is closely monitored for seven years, and tortured for as many months. Most of his contacts presumably present a similar workload for the Ministry of Love: his mother, Julia, Parsons, Ampleforth and Syme. One wonders what percentage of Outer Party members enter Room 101. The majority? |
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#5 | |
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Orwellian
Join Date: Mar 2007
Location: The George Orwell sub-forum
Posts: 2,110
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Quote:
The other side of the coin is that with the use of Doublethink and reducing rations, Oceania's economy can afford the expense, ergo, it's cheap at the price. What price would you put on immortality? |
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#6 |
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Registered User
Join Date: Sep 2009
Posts: 1
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In addition to flawlessly sustaining the totalitarian system through the torture, the Inner Party members completely believe in the benefits of the system. They torture the Party members because they love them. Freedom is slavery is not just a slogan to them, it is an absolute truth. O'Brien takes it upon himself to suffer the costs of freedom in order to give Winston and the other party members the benefits of the unfailing system. O'Brien tortures Winston to purify him, make him clean. He ensures that Winston is perfectly at peace in the utmost conformity. That isn't hate, that's love. In a horrible way, but love nonetheless.
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#7 |
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Orwellian
Join Date: Mar 2007
Location: The George Orwell sub-forum
Posts: 2,110
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You got it!
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#8 | ||
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the beloved:
Join Date: Oct 2007
Location: Australia
Posts: 831
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Quote:
Quote:
It's extreme hate disguised as love, through doublethink. Hitler's elite espoused similar sentiments, and believed them as much: they 'loved' the Jews they were exterminating. |
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#9 | ||
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Orwellian
Join Date: Mar 2007
Location: The George Orwell sub-forum
Posts: 2,110
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Quote:
You don't even need doublethink unless you consider other Party members or proles, and why would you? Quote:
![]() You're looking at it with your own eyes instead of Party eyes. |
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#10 |
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Registered User
Join Date: Jun 2007
Location: Wiltingen, Germany
Posts: 822
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It is only an observation because I never read this book, but it seems to me that the system in 1984 is more like the Communist one than the Nazi one. At least not the Hoocaust. Maybe National Socialism for the Germans then, if you want.
It is not so short-sighted to say that they did it because they loved them. The communists made everyone the same because they thought competition ruined the people (made them hungry, made serveral classes who did not care about each other, legitimised a king who had way more money than the poor who were starving). They did not realise that competition is in all of us and that it is natural to want more than your neighbour. Although this thing againt capitalism was not the only ground (I ould even say certainly not the main ground) for the Revolution in Russia (the main cause was the absolute monarchy with a tsar who did not have a clue due to his bad advisors, sitting his Ivory Tower), it played a big role in the perception of people. Other than that, a system that starts in benevolence (or at least for some, in the communist system. Not mentioning of course the confiscation of goods in favour of 'the people'. Not asking what it did to the people that had those goods before and lost their living because of a confiscation), ends in oppression, because 'it is for your own well-being'. Anyone who thinks differently is a thread to the good of society as a whole and needs to be silenced. But those are oppresses for their ow good. Out of loveso to say. The Holocaust does not compare to this, because the Nazis never claimed to do good to the Jews. They did claim to undo society of Jewish rot (excuse the term), but they never oppressd the Jews because they loved them. Their extermination would benefit society but the Nazis never claimed that it would do the Jews (and others that were persecuted) any good. Other than the National Socialists and Communists who loved the People and were going to force them in a certain direction because they deemed it a good one... There is a distinction between the dictatorships and mass-killing.
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One has to laugh before being happy, because otherwise one risks to die before having laughed. |
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#11 | |||
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the beloved:
Join Date: Oct 2007
Location: Australia
Posts: 831
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Quote:
Quote:
Quote:
Orwell began writing 1984 in 1947, the year after the notorious Nuremberg trials, in which more than one Nazi defendant seemed to share O'Brien's wretched world-view. |
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#12 | |
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the beloved:
Join Date: Oct 2007
Location: Australia
Posts: 831
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Quote:
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#13 |
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Registered User
Join Date: Jun 2007
Location: Wiltingen, Germany
Posts: 822
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There is a difference between the Nazi dictatorship in Germany (National Socialism) and the Holocaust.
The two are connected, but are not the same. Nationalsozialismus was a model, typically of dictatorship, that was going to make life better for everyone (read: the working classes and lower middle classes). The intellectual elite (political and cultural elite) did not agree with that, but the working classes and the lower middle classes did because they had severe problems with the recession, which the elite did not have (they did not lose their jobs, their money in most cases). Nationalsozialismus is a subdivision of fascism which is profoundly racist in its views. As such they decided that, as the Jews were part of the cultural and political elite, they would get them out of the way. Of course not telling that there wer at least as many, if not more, Jews who were only working class. O'Brien, as far as I can see, is brainwashed and a spy for Big Brother. As in the Stasi in the former DDR, he is employed to become a friend of Smith and see what the danger in that guy is. Obviously they have spotted him somehow. Later becomes clear that O'Brien was everything but a friend and that he made out to be one just to get information out of Smith. Much like the Stasi-practices The torture in the end is a manner of brainwashing Julia and Winston. If they tell Winston he is going to be executed anyway (even if accepting the reality as Big Brother tells it), then there is no harm in accepting or not accepting. But telling you accept it is a good start to really accepting it. It is the first step, getting used to the idea and finding peace. There is for a start no evidence of killing as such. Only metaphorical killing. Love for the Nazi-party did not induce people to kiling, on the contrary. That is myth in my opinion. What happened in the concentration camps was so secret even the US Army did not believe the Jews when they told them (true! They refused to help with the uprising in the Warsaw Ghetto under the pretext 'that thngs [couldn't] be that bad'.). It only became clear how true the rumours were when the camps were liberated. Post that came out of the camps was censured so no-one would suspect (seen post firsthand myself). It only tells of, ironically, how good it is there and that one is 'healthy and happy'. (If only...) When you got there as a soldier, you were compelled, like any other soldier, to carry out your duties, and your illusions about the good the Nazi Party was doing quickly went away after seeing what they did to those people. Although, people were brainwashed, as they are under any dictatorship to an extent, in thinking that for example the prisoners who went on the death-marches in the latter stages of the war, were dangerous criminals. Not true of course, but it was certainly not love for the party that prevented them from helping them. It was rather fear, induced by the Party, that compelled them not to help (if that was possible at all after being ordered to stay in your house). In addition to that, one is not supposed to oppose, so soldiers complied with their orders and killed people. Apart from the people who were the brains behind Die Endlösung and a few very much indoctrinated people in the SS, I would be very suprised that there were many who actually stood really behind this, who had experienced first-hand what it was like. Let's say it was not 'love' as suh that compelled them to kill, it was the System that did it. A soldier is not allowed to refuse orders because he gets court-marshalled for it (in war-time gets shot). So he has to. Whether he agrees or disagrees. Some of them, as young boys who have seen nothing of the world and society, did agree with it and went voluntarily to the army and SS (as the elite-corps (imagine what an honour)), but they did not realise the full extent of the System Nationalsozialismus, they had only seen the surface (happy people, with jobs (das Witschaftswunder), great motorways, the Arian Race (beautyful blond maidens)) and everything. Once they saw the nasty side, that was it. Sadly they did not have he possibility to step out of it. That is why I think that 1984 does not have a lot in common with Nazism. Nazism was a system that had a very ugly side, but that on the surface provided everything a society needed: culture, history, diversion, science... And that is what was not included in 1984 because people should focus on The Party. Communism did that in a sense. Still providing culture and science, but on a very small level so that people could certainly not start thinking against Communism (they kept people local in an attempt to keep them stupid). Nazism rather dwelled on the great history of Germany (great-Germany that is) and on the sueriority of German art. They created their own (ghastly) art and provided eve their (Germanic) religion. There might be a little unconditional love for the Party there in O'Brien, but more like Goebbels's wife who murdered her children when the Russians were approaching because she thought there was no life beyond Nazi-Germany. So, if seen in that light (and not in line with the Holocaust) O'Brien either had to kill Julia and Winston physically if they did not wish to comply with the rules, or he brainwashed them, killed them mentally. Clearly they chose the latter. Certainly, though, Julia and Winston are not part of a prosecuted race, but rather dangerous critical subjects like the Communists used to put in mental asylums.
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One has to laugh before being happy, because otherwise one risks to die before having laughed. Last edited by kiki1982; 09-24-2009 at 09:29 AM. |
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#14 | |
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the beloved:
Join Date: Oct 2007
Location: Australia
Posts: 831
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Quote:
Clearly, Oceania in 1984 is a far more radical environment than either Hitler's Germany or Stalin's Russia. Set in London, once the jewel of democracies, Oceania (along with Eurasia and Eastasia) has learned from the flaws and failings of past totalitarian regimes. Unlike Nazi Germany, the broad population subsists in near poverty, is monitored more closely than the Starsi in the GDR, and dissent is ruthlessly crushed. O'Brien - as an elite and pampered Inner Party member - can't be compared with your average Nazi or Gestapo policeman, but rather to the exclusive intelligentsia consisting of privileged and informed individuals like Adolph Eichmann and his superiors. O'Brien after all wrote Emmanuel Goldstein's subversive book and appreciated the mythical nature of Big Brother. And like Eichmann, O'Brien orchestrates the atrocity that continues to annihilate millions of Outer Party members and precocious Proles. Whether this 'killing' is literal or metaphorical matters little. |
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#15 |
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Registered User
Join Date: Jun 2007
Location: Wiltingen, Germany
Posts: 822
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It is clear that 1984 is an anti-totalitarian work and in that, The Party does better than any regime before.
I think the difference between metaphorical and real killing matters hugely because the first is sadder than the second. Russia and the other communist countries of the USSR are still profoundly affected by communist idealogy. Sure, they are now free but their way of life is still very much directed towards the environment directly around the home. TV is very big. The differences between the classes were gone in that middle classes wre working classes and vice versa. The only people one could really deem middle class were the party-members. The others (no matter what profession they had) were cramped in little appartments. They are still and intelligent people who would be middle class in our free world, still have a working-class-type feel to them. The Nazi dictatorship could have had the same implications, but that was only 10 years.The largest amount of people who went through that still knew the times before. With the communists the largest amount of the population had grown up in this atmosphere of seemingly non-opression (but don't be fooled). They are now still so. Odd. O'Brien seems to me as a very much indoctrinated, hard-line Party-member. Someone who believes in the ideology (there are still neo-Nazis and convinced communists, more to find in China (up to the point that they say 'It never rains in China, only at night' (true))). I think O'Brien kills the two (Julia and Winston) metaphorically, which is worse than an execution, because now they believe in the ideology they so much despised. That is a violation of the human soul, of humanity itself, of free thinking. Locking someone up and killing him,is despicable, but making someone believe in something different, someting that harms them in their humanity, is even worse. Their free-thinking having been taken away, they are reduced to robots. They are no longer human.
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One has to laugh before being happy, because otherwise one risks to die before having laughed. Last edited by kiki1982; 09-25-2009 at 06:59 AM. |
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