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Shattered union the last cry of freedom
Shattered union the last cry of freedom









The book’s title and many of its concepts, such as Big Brother and the Thought Police, are instantly recognised and understood, often as bywords for modern social and political abuses.

shattered union the last cry of freedom

Winston is the symbol of the values of civilised life, and his defeat is a poignant reminder of the vulnerability of such values amid all-powerful states. Its depiction of a state where daring to think differently is rewarded with torture, where people are monitored every second of the day, and where party propaganda trumps free speech and thought is a sobering reminder of the evils of unaccountable governments. All they can do is cry for freedom.īritannica says Orwell wrote Nineteen Eighty-four as a warning after years of brooding on the twin menaces of Nazism and Stalinism.

shattered union the last cry of freedom shattered union the last cry of freedom

Looking at the events unfolding in the world today, a lucid mind can only point at a situation where every country has become Oceania where there is double-speak.Ĭitizens across the world do not have any freedoms left. There has always been this belief that the British author George Orwell wrote his book 1984 to depict the tyranny in the then Soviet Union.











Shattered union the last cry of freedom