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Orwell’s 1984. Purpose and Form. AO3 Show detailed understanding of the ways in which writers' choices of form , structure and language shape meanings A Grade:
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Orwell’s 1984 Purpose and Form
AO3 • Show detailed understanding of the ways in which writers' choices of form, structure and language shape meanings • A Grade: • AO3 exploration and analysis of key aspects of form, structure and language with perceptive evaluation of how they shape meanings
AO2i: respond with knowledge & understanding to literary texts of different types and periods. • AO5i: Show understanding of the contexts in which the texts are written and understood. • AO5ii: Evaluate the significance of cultural, historical and other contextual influences upon literary texts and study.
‘Why I Write’ • Aim as a writer has been to make political writing into an art • ‘ I write because there is some lie that I want to expose, some face to which I want to draw attention, and my initial concern is to get a hearing’
Aim to tell the truth, as he saw it, to show up the lies and contradictions in public attitudes • Writer’s role as moral conscience • Sense of the way political systems can suppress individual thought and emotion and of man’s inhumanity to man • Obsessed with the lie- ‘there is no such thing as objective truth’
He wishes to expose the inhumanity of political oppression and the kind of lie on which that inhumanity can rest • Chose to set ideas out in literary form- more convincing • Exploring these ideas in living form- testing them against character
Form • What type of novel is 1984? • Why do you think this?
Form Combining political purpose with artistic instinct- Animal Farm - Animal Fable 1984 - Dystopian Novel / Scientific Romance
Definitions • Utopia:A place, state, or condition that is ideally perfect in respect of politics, laws, customs, and conditions. • Dystopia:A futuristic, imagined universe in which oppressive societal control and the illusion of a perfect society are maintained through corporate, bureaucratic, technological, moral, or totalitarian control. Dystopias, through an exaggerated worst-case scenario, make a criticism about a current trend, societal norm, or political system.
Genre : Dystopia Dystopia = a perfect society gone wrong Orwell warns against what could happen in the future based on the atrocities and dictators that gained power in WWII • The rise of totalitarian governments • The use of science and technology to regulate or brainwash society • The distortion off truth through rhetoric
What Orwell Saw .. .. .. • Economic depression in the 1930s • High unemployment • Shortages of money, housing, and food • Restrictions on daily life and rations • The beginning of the Cold War • Countries east of “iron curtain” were • communist • Countries west of it were protected by US
Types of Dystopian Controls • Most dystopian works present a world in which oppressive societal control and the illusion of a perfect society are maintained through one or more of the following types of controls: • • Corporate control: One or more large corporations control society through products, advertising, and/or the media. Examples include Minority Report and Running Man. • • Bureaucratic control: Society is controlled by a mindless bureaucracy through a tangle of red tape, relentless regulations, and incompetent government officials. Examples in film include Brazil. • • Technological control: Society is controlled by technology—through computers, robots, and/or scientific means. Examples include The Matrix, The Terminator, and I, Robot. • • Philosophical/religious control: Society is controlled by philosophical or religious ideology often enforced through a dictatorship or theocratic government.
The Dystopian Protagonist • often feels trapped and is struggling to escape. questions the existing social and political systems. • believes or feels that something is terribly wrong with the society in which he or she lives. • helps the audience recognize the negative aspects of the dystopian world through his or her perspective.
How does this novel connect with our ownsociety? What is Orwell’s ultimate message about • Societal apathy? • The use of fear? • Mass manipulation? • Isolation and individualism?
Scientific Romance • Has within it a set of conventions which allow him to put forward his political convictions and explore the psychological developments of a central character • Political ideas are humanised Therefore in 1984 : Form and structure depend upon one another
Tables- Homework Work in pairs- compare/explain the ways in which the novel fits into each genre
Comparing the Texts • How does the purpose, structure and form of Nineteen Eighty Four’ compare to that of ‘The Handmaid’s Tale?’
E.g. Novel-dystopian Novel-written transcript. • Choices within the novel form/genre present in the narrative include: • 1. diary entry • 2. dialogue/conversation • 3. reported speech • 4. letter • 5. description • 6. interior monologue