「George Orwell: 1984 Chapter Summaries」の版間の差分
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− | Make sure you are receiving the most out of 1984 with your chapter-by-chapter reviews for books 1, 2, and 3.<br>Use this 1984 Study Guide to review Orwell's classic. Find more novel study guides at Brighthub.com.<br>Chapter One: The novel's first chapter introduces | + | Make sure you are receiving the most out of 1984 with your chapter-by-chapter reviews for books 1, 2, and 3.<br>Use this 1984 Study Guide to review Orwell's classic. Find more novel study guides at Brighthub.com.<br>Chapter One: The novel's first chapter introduces your reader to the novel's protagonist, Winston Smith of Airstrip One, Oceania. Winston can be an unimportant part of Ingsoc, the controlling party of Oceania. As he labors in the stairs to his apartment, he passes several posters of Big Brother, the embodiment of party leadership, who in fact represents oppression, but to citizens represents everything that is good. Winston commits <br><br><br><br>eval(ez_write_tag([[468,60],'brighthubeducation_com-banner-1']));<br><br><br>thoughtcrime by writing DOWN WITH BIG BROTHER as part of his diary, the possessing which constitutes thoughtcrime.<br>Chapter Two: Winston hears a knock on the door and fears it's the thought police. It's actually his neighbor whose sink he unplugs and whose youngsters are junior spies for your party.<br><br><br><br><br>eval(ez_write_tag([[300,250],'brighthubeducation_com-medrectangle-2']));<br><br><br>Chapter Three: Winston desires his mother, of an naked girl running toward him, in addition to Shakespeare, the 3 of which represent thoughtcrime. He awakens for the telescreen's shrill cry of exercise time.<br>Chapter Four: Winston would go to work at The Ministry of Truth. His job is to falsify past records to make them conform to current reality.<br>Chapter Five: Winston eats lunch with Syme, an authority on Newspeak, the state language of the party, whose purpose would be to reduce the amount of words and to render thoughtcrime impossible.<br>Chapter Six: Winston records his latest sex act in the diary, a disgusting affair using a Prole [http://numbers-whatsapp.com/ WhatsApp Numbers] prostitute without teeth. He longs for the meaningful relationship, what he considers the greatest rebellion from the party.<br><br><br><br><br>eval(ez_write_tag([[580,400],'brighthubeducation_com-netboard-1']));<br><br><br>Chapter Seven: Winston writes in the diary that this only hope is incorporated in the Proles, the significant class. He longs for a sense with the past, covers a children's history book, and realizes any record in the past is controlled through the party and contains been falsified.<br>Chapter Eight: Winston wanders to the Prole district and buys a paperweight in the same store he bought the diary. He notices a woman from the Ministry of Truth and fears he is being followed. He contemplates smashing her face in with a cobblestone.<br>Analysis: The party controls its citizens through media manipulation, language manipulation, psychological trickery, the dissolving of family ties, and torture. The party makes illegal everything that make life enjoyable: family ties, sex, romantic love, the freedom to consider, great literature, and anything , involving introspection. Although Oceania doesn't have specific laws prohibiting any of Winston's actions, his actions are outward signs which he has committed the greatest crime, thoughtcrime.<br>Book One introduces the reader to the novel's other two significant characters, Julia, the woman in the blue overalls, and O'Brien, the inner party member who Winston believes may be a fellow conspirator.<br>Chapter One: The girl who earlier Winston wished to strike in the face which has a cobblestone passes him an email that says "I adore you." It takes several attempts, nevertheless the two can converse and schedule a meeting at Victory Square. Winston feels he has a reason to reside in.<br>Chapter Two: The two meet within the country and engage in romantic love acts.<br>Chapter Three: The two return to normal party lives and find a way to meet only for short durations. They rendezvous with an abandoned church. Winston realizes that Julia is just not interested in a wide rebellion. She is only considering outsmarting the party inside them for hours intercourse.<br>Chapter Four: Winston rents a place above Mr Charrington's shop, where he purchased the diary and the paper weight. He realizes it's a huge risk but he feels it's worth every penny.<br>Chapter Five: Syme disappears (as WInston predicted earlier). Winston constantly thinks about the room above Charrington's shop, considering what proceeds there, I think we understand.<br>Chapter Six: O'Brien stops Winston inside the hall and provide him his address. Winston is just not sure if it is a sign from your underground or if he's a measure closer to his doom.<br>Chapter Seven: Winston and Julia visit their rented room frequently. They know they will eventually be captured and tortured which renting the room is stupid. They carry on and rent it anyhow and promise each other they're going to remain loyal.<br>Chapter Eight: Winston and Julia visit O'Brien and discuss the underground with him. He promises Winston he will deliver a novel containing the secrets of the underground.<br>Chapter Nine: Oceania has stopped being at war with East Asia. It's at war with Eurasia. This forces Winston and his awesome Ministry of Truth coworkers to log 96 hours in the next month or so. Finally, Winston has the capacity to escape to his rented room where he reads it given him by O'Brien. The book explains the significance and specification of War is Peace, Ignorance is Strength, and Freedom is Slavery.<br>Chapter 10: As it turns out, Mr. Charrington is a part of the Thought Police and there's a telescreen behind the picture inside the room above his shop. Winston and Julia are arrested.<br>Analysis: The moment WInston, Julia, and people have all been expecting finally occurs in the end of chapter 10. The only question remaining is whether or not Winston and Julia betray one another. Don't you hate it whenever you buy illegal items from an undercover thought policeman? I imagine Winston feels pretty stupid. That whole "Here comes a chopper to chop off your brain poem" has haunted me since part one and really should have been an idea to Winston that both Charrington and O'Brien weren't to be trusted.<br>Chapter One: Winston awaits his punishment in a very cell with prisoners, victims of starvation and beatings. His coworker Ampleforth continues to be arrested, as has his neighbor Parsons. O'Brien enters and reveals himself as an agent in the Ministry of Truth. A security guard smashes Winston's elbow having a club. It hurts. Bad.<br>Chapter Two: O'Brien tries to "cure" Winston's "insanity" with torture. Winston agrees to anything O'Brien tells him and actually starts to love O'Brien as they can stop the pain sensation. O'Brien explains the party has perfected a system that will have them in power forever. They do not kill any prisoners until they may be "cured."<br>Chapter Three: O'Brien tortures Winston more. He tells Winston the party's true aim is to remain in power forever by controlling all things. Winston argues the party cannot control external events. O'Brien thinks otherwise, explaining that providing the party controls mental performance, anything is possible. O'Brien admits that Winston has yet to betray Julia, but doesn't appear too upset by it, realizing that eventually many people are cured.<br>Chapter Four: Winston is delivered to a more comfortable room, is fed regularly, and is not tortured. He still hates Big Brother and wants to die hating Big Brother as being a last act of rebellion. He wakes up coming from a dream and shouts Julia's name several times. O'Brien arrives and orders Winston to room 101.<br>Chapter Five: Winston's face is strapped to a cage which contains starving rats. Just before O'Brien pulls the lever release a them, Winston asks that Julia take his place. With the final betrayal complete, the torture stops.<br>Chapter Six: Winston sits in the Chestnut Tree Cafe drinking Victory Gin and accepting everything Big Brother says. He has met with Julia once since released but neither had any fascination with continuing their relationship. After news of your great war victory, Winston acknowledges he loves Big Brother.<br>Analysis: Evil wins. All it took was weeks of torture, a cage full of rats, and enough gin to paralyze a rhinoceros. I love Big Brother. |
2016年7月27日 (水) 23:35時点における版
Make sure you are receiving the most out of 1984 with your chapter-by-chapter reviews for books 1, 2, and 3.
Use this 1984 Study Guide to review Orwell's classic. Find more novel study guides at Brighthub.com.
Chapter One: The novel's first chapter introduces your reader to the novel's protagonist, Winston Smith of Airstrip One, Oceania. Winston can be an unimportant part of Ingsoc, the controlling party of Oceania. As he labors in the stairs to his apartment, he passes several posters of Big Brother, the embodiment of party leadership, who in fact represents oppression, but to citizens represents everything that is good. Winston commits
eval(ez_write_tag([[468,60],'brighthubeducation_com-banner-1']));
thoughtcrime by writing DOWN WITH BIG BROTHER as part of his diary, the possessing which constitutes thoughtcrime.
Chapter Two: Winston hears a knock on the door and fears it's the thought police. It's actually his neighbor whose sink he unplugs and whose youngsters are junior spies for your party.
eval(ez_write_tag([[300,250],'brighthubeducation_com-medrectangle-2']));
Chapter Three: Winston desires his mother, of an naked girl running toward him, in addition to Shakespeare, the 3 of which represent thoughtcrime. He awakens for the telescreen's shrill cry of exercise time.
Chapter Four: Winston would go to work at The Ministry of Truth. His job is to falsify past records to make them conform to current reality.
Chapter Five: Winston eats lunch with Syme, an authority on Newspeak, the state language of the party, whose purpose would be to reduce the amount of words and to render thoughtcrime impossible.
Chapter Six: Winston records his latest sex act in the diary, a disgusting affair using a Prole WhatsApp Numbers prostitute without teeth. He longs for the meaningful relationship, what he considers the greatest rebellion from the party.
eval(ez_write_tag([[580,400],'brighthubeducation_com-netboard-1']));
Chapter Seven: Winston writes in the diary that this only hope is incorporated in the Proles, the significant class. He longs for a sense with the past, covers a children's history book, and realizes any record in the past is controlled through the party and contains been falsified.
Chapter Eight: Winston wanders to the Prole district and buys a paperweight in the same store he bought the diary. He notices a woman from the Ministry of Truth and fears he is being followed. He contemplates smashing her face in with a cobblestone.
Analysis: The party controls its citizens through media manipulation, language manipulation, psychological trickery, the dissolving of family ties, and torture. The party makes illegal everything that make life enjoyable: family ties, sex, romantic love, the freedom to consider, great literature, and anything , involving introspection. Although Oceania doesn't have specific laws prohibiting any of Winston's actions, his actions are outward signs which he has committed the greatest crime, thoughtcrime.
Book One introduces the reader to the novel's other two significant characters, Julia, the woman in the blue overalls, and O'Brien, the inner party member who Winston believes may be a fellow conspirator.
Chapter One: The girl who earlier Winston wished to strike in the face which has a cobblestone passes him an email that says "I adore you." It takes several attempts, nevertheless the two can converse and schedule a meeting at Victory Square. Winston feels he has a reason to reside in.
Chapter Two: The two meet within the country and engage in romantic love acts.
Chapter Three: The two return to normal party lives and find a way to meet only for short durations. They rendezvous with an abandoned church. Winston realizes that Julia is just not interested in a wide rebellion. She is only considering outsmarting the party inside them for hours intercourse.
Chapter Four: Winston rents a place above Mr Charrington's shop, where he purchased the diary and the paper weight. He realizes it's a huge risk but he feels it's worth every penny.
Chapter Five: Syme disappears (as WInston predicted earlier). Winston constantly thinks about the room above Charrington's shop, considering what proceeds there, I think we understand.
Chapter Six: O'Brien stops Winston inside the hall and provide him his address. Winston is just not sure if it is a sign from your underground or if he's a measure closer to his doom.
Chapter Seven: Winston and Julia visit their rented room frequently. They know they will eventually be captured and tortured which renting the room is stupid. They carry on and rent it anyhow and promise each other they're going to remain loyal.
Chapter Eight: Winston and Julia visit O'Brien and discuss the underground with him. He promises Winston he will deliver a novel containing the secrets of the underground.
Chapter Nine: Oceania has stopped being at war with East Asia. It's at war with Eurasia. This forces Winston and his awesome Ministry of Truth coworkers to log 96 hours in the next month or so. Finally, Winston has the capacity to escape to his rented room where he reads it given him by O'Brien. The book explains the significance and specification of War is Peace, Ignorance is Strength, and Freedom is Slavery.
Chapter 10: As it turns out, Mr. Charrington is a part of the Thought Police and there's a telescreen behind the picture inside the room above his shop. Winston and Julia are arrested.
Analysis: The moment WInston, Julia, and people have all been expecting finally occurs in the end of chapter 10. The only question remaining is whether or not Winston and Julia betray one another. Don't you hate it whenever you buy illegal items from an undercover thought policeman? I imagine Winston feels pretty stupid. That whole "Here comes a chopper to chop off your brain poem" has haunted me since part one and really should have been an idea to Winston that both Charrington and O'Brien weren't to be trusted.
Chapter One: Winston awaits his punishment in a very cell with prisoners, victims of starvation and beatings. His coworker Ampleforth continues to be arrested, as has his neighbor Parsons. O'Brien enters and reveals himself as an agent in the Ministry of Truth. A security guard smashes Winston's elbow having a club. It hurts. Bad.
Chapter Two: O'Brien tries to "cure" Winston's "insanity" with torture. Winston agrees to anything O'Brien tells him and actually starts to love O'Brien as they can stop the pain sensation. O'Brien explains the party has perfected a system that will have them in power forever. They do not kill any prisoners until they may be "cured."
Chapter Three: O'Brien tortures Winston more. He tells Winston the party's true aim is to remain in power forever by controlling all things. Winston argues the party cannot control external events. O'Brien thinks otherwise, explaining that providing the party controls mental performance, anything is possible. O'Brien admits that Winston has yet to betray Julia, but doesn't appear too upset by it, realizing that eventually many people are cured.
Chapter Four: Winston is delivered to a more comfortable room, is fed regularly, and is not tortured. He still hates Big Brother and wants to die hating Big Brother as being a last act of rebellion. He wakes up coming from a dream and shouts Julia's name several times. O'Brien arrives and orders Winston to room 101.
Chapter Five: Winston's face is strapped to a cage which contains starving rats. Just before O'Brien pulls the lever release a them, Winston asks that Julia take his place. With the final betrayal complete, the torture stops.
Chapter Six: Winston sits in the Chestnut Tree Cafe drinking Victory Gin and accepting everything Big Brother says. He has met with Julia once since released but neither had any fascination with continuing their relationship. After news of your great war victory, Winston acknowledges he loves Big Brother.
Analysis: Evil wins. All it took was weeks of torture, a cage full of rats, and enough gin to paralyze a rhinoceros. I love Big Brother.