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Everyone remembers the rats. Mention 1984 at a party and someone, eventually, will bring up Room 101. The cage. The face. The famous scream — Do it to Julia! Not me, do it to Julia! It’s one of the most quoted scenes in twentieth-century literature, and rightly so. It’s horrifying. But the rats are a…
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When people argue about the most dangerous weapon ever invented, the usual suspects come up. The atom bomb. The machine gun. Gunpowder. More recently, drones, surveillance tech, engineered viruses, artificial intelligence. There’s always a new candidate. A new mushroom cloud on a new horizon. But all of these weapons share a limitation. They have to…
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Let’s say the unsayable thing about 1984. Winston Smith is a terrible rebel. Not in the brave, tragic, doomed-from-the-start way the book is usually read. In a much more ordinary way. The man is, by any reasonable spy-craft standard, an absolute disaster. If you handed his behaviour to anyone who’d lived through an actual police…
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1984 is one of those books that feels complete until you start asking it real questions. What happens to children in a world like Oceania? What does the Party look like from the inside, not from Winston’s small clerk-level view? What about the people who actually like the system? What happens when the regime ends…
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Most people remember 1984 for its big moments. Room 101. The rats. Two plus two equals five. Big Brother on the wall. These are the scenes that get quoted, parodied, tattooed on people’s forearms in moments of poor judgement. But Orwell wasn’t really writing through scenes. He was writing through objects. The book is full…
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We’ve all used the phrase. Big Brother is watching. It gets thrown around whenever a CCTV camera catches us picking our nose at a red light, or when an app asks for one too many permissions. It’s become shorthand for surveillance — vaguely sinister, vaguely funny, the kind of thing you mutter and then scroll…
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Most people remember 1984 for the surveillance. The telescreens watching every room. The Thought Police. Big Brother’s face on every poster. And those things are unsettling, sure. But they’re not what makes the book genuinely terrifying. They’re not even close. The truly disturbing idea in 1984, the one that should keep you up at night…







