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1984 by George Orwell Summary

In the year 1984 London has become the principal city in Oceania. It is now known as Airstrip One. Oceania is one of three superpowers and

totalitarian regions into which the world is divided; the others are Eurasia and Eastasia. The ruling power, known only as the Party, is headed by a mysterious agent called Big Brother. The face of Big Brother appears everywhere on posters with the caption: “BIG BROTHER IS WATCHING YOU.”

The Party consists of four divisions: the Ministry of Love, the Ministry of Peace, the Ministry of Plenty, and the Ministry of Truth. Here we meet the protagonist, Winston Smith, who works in the records department of the Ministry of Truth. Since the Ministry of Truth must appear the source of absolute truth, Winston works as one of the functionaries whose job is to alter all records and documents so that they agree entirely with the message of the Ministry of Truth.

The white façade of the building of the Ministry of Truth bears the main slogans: “WAR IS PEACE,” FREEDOM IS SLAVERY,” and “IGNORANCE IS STRENGTH.” The party’s slogans and propaganda are broadcast on telescreens in every home and throughout the city. These telescreens also provide constant surveillance of everyone and everything in the city.

The “proles,” or proletariat, make up the majority of the population and are regarded by the party as inferior. Oceania also remains in a state of constant war with either Eurasia or Eastasia. As the novel begins, Oceania is at war with Eurasia. The Party maintains that they were never at war with Eastasia and the Ministry of Truth is altering all documents and newspapers to ensure that the truth of this state of war is consistent.

We also meet Emmanuel Goldstein who is enemy number one to the Party. Goldstein brought the party to power and now leads an underground resistance. The Party is actively engaged in capturing him and destroying him.

Winston keeps a diary in which he writes his memories of before the Party came to power, and before his parents disappeared. He also writes down his private thoughts and feelings and these are dangerous. He records thoughts too dangerous to speak aloud such as “DOWN WITH BIG BROTHER.” Any private thoughts of this kind are strictly forbidden and could get him arrested and executed. These ideas are regulated by the Thought Police and are deemed “thoughtcrimes.”

Winston realizes that the only readers of his diary will likely be the Thought Police, yet he writes them anyway. Privately, he hopes that his diary will be read by a high-ranking party member named O’Brien who Winston believes shares his anti-Party feelings. Winston is attracted to a young woman who works in the Fiction Department, but he also believes she may be secretly spying on him.

On one particular evening, Winston decides to skip the sanctioned activities at the Community Center and go for a walk by himself. He stops into a prole pub for a drink and strikes up a conversation with an older man. Winston presses the man on what he really thinks of the Party. He asks if the older man thinks things were better or worse before the revolution that brought the Party to power.

The man only mumbles vague answers. Afterward, Winston stops into the junk shop where previously he bought his diary, and buys a beautiful antique glass paperweight. While there, he chats up the proprietor, Mr. Charrington. As he is leaving the shop, he sees the woman from the Fiction Department. Fearing his suspicions about her are true, he runs home in terror.

After some time, Winston sees the same woman in the corridor of the Ministry of Truth. She has her arm in a sling and Winston sees her trip and fall. While he remains suspicious, he also feels for her and comes to her aid. At this, she slips a note to him which reads: “I love you.” They arrange to meet in secret in the countryside where they begin a love affair.

Non-procreative sex between members of the party is strictly forbidden. However, Winston sees his relationship with this sexually liberated young woman, Julia, as both thrilling and as a political act. They come to view liberated sexuality as a force which could subvert and destroy the Party.

Winston eventually rents a room above the antique shop from Mr. Charrington. This becomes the sanctuary for him and Julia. The room is extremely old-fashioned. There is no telescreen, for one thing. Winston places the paperweight in the room as a symbol of the love between him and Julia. They carve out a small oasis for their relationship to flourish and to discuss anti-Party ideas.

As if to add to the feeling of safe isolation, Winston and Julia often hear a washing woman singing in the courtyard beneath their secret room. The talk at length about how to rebel against the party, although they have no idea how to proceed or act on these ideas. They also openly talk about how the Party will one day find them out and what that will eventually mean. They know that they will be taken to the Ministry of Love, the most feared of the ministries since it deals with law and order.

They also know that they will be tortured and forced to confess all that they have done and said. But they promise that they will sustain their love for each other, that the Ministry will never be able to corrupt or compromise them. They swear that they will not betray each other or the feelings they have for each other.

One day, Winston is approached by O’Brien at the Ministry of Truth. O’Brien gives him an address to meet him. Winston is thrilled since he is now convinced about his belief that O’Brien is involved in the rebellion after all. When Winston and Julia show up at O’Brien’s apartment, they are happy to discover that he is a member of the rebellion and he recruits them for underground Brotherhood led by Goldstein. Winston and Julia swear their allegiance. They agree even to murder and suicide as long as they will not be parted. O’Brien explains that their crimes against the party will almost certainly lead to their arrest.

Meanwhile, the Party announces that Oceania is at war with Eastasia. Since it now must be made a matter of public truth that they have always been at war with Eastasia, all records and historical documents must be quickly altered to represent this position. This event marks Hate Week, which is meant to stir feelings of antagonism against the enemies of the Party.

That same day, Winston receives from O’Brien a copy of Goldstein’s book, The Theory and Practice of Oligarchical Collectivism. Winston is able to devote his time to reading the book during the busy week in which the employees of the Ministry of Truth are compelled to alter all the documents to show that Oceania has always been at war with Eastasia.

In this book, Winston studies the theories and methods of the Party itself. The book explains how the Party came to power, and how it maintains power through a process called doublethink, a mental process whereby people are able to believe what they are told while forgetting everything they know to actually be true.

Winston finds reassurance in the book since it confirms his ideas about the Party. Winston realizes that the only hope for real rebellion is by organizing the proles.

Winston is unable to finish the book before he and Julia are arrested. They had been set up the entire time by Charrington. An antique engraving on one of the walls of their rented room contained a telescreen placed there by Charrington who is in fact a member of the Thought Police. During the arrest of Winston and Julia, the police smash Winston’s glass paperweight and he and Julia are taken separately away. This is a highly symbolic moment. The emblem of their love, their relationship, and their commitment to the rebellion is smashed.

Winston is put in a windowless cell in the Ministry of Love. Other prisoners come and go until Winston is finally all alone. He is shocked to see O’Brien who reveals that he has been loyal to the Party the entire time. Over a period of weeks or possibly even months, Winston is beaten and interrogated by the Party officials—the Party Intellectuals– until they finally force him to confess to crimes they have made up.

The torture is escalated in order to break Winston. He is subjected to extreme pain and electric shocks designed to force him to not only confess to crimes but also to accept the Party doctrine.

O’Brien explains that the torture is really a kind of treatment designed to cure him of insanity. He is by definition insane by not accepting the Party rules and laws. Winston endures this torture for quite some time. He even openly says that he hates Big Brother. But he absently utters Julia’s name and with this he is taken to the terrifying Room 101 for the final phase of his “cure.”

In Room 101 each prisoner is forced to endure the one thing which most horrifies them. They know that Winston is terrified of rats and they put his head in a cage containing two rats set to devour his face. As O’Brien lowers the cage, Winston finally breaks. He begs for mercy and finally begs that Julia be tortured instead.

Winston is finally cured in the view of the Party and he is released. He spends his days at the Chestnut Tree Café drinking copious amounts of gin. He is given a new job is in a frivolous sub-committee in the Ministry of Truth.

Eventually Winston and Julia do see each other once in a park where they confess their betrayal. Winston no longer feels anything for Julia and really only wants only to return to the Chestnut Tree Café and drink gin. In the end, he sees an announcement on a telescreen that Oceania has won a victory over Eurasia. Winston is filled with joy for his new love for Big Brother. In fact, Winston is completely defeated. His joy is a really the hope that he will soon be executed.

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