To
begin with, 1984 is taking place in London, which is the chief city
of Airstrip One. Winston Smith, the main character, is convinced that
people, including himself, is living in some kind of dystopia, even though many
aren’t aware of that.
George
Orwell is mostly using a language that is easy to understand with
just enough adjectives when describing persons and buildings to
invite the reader to freely envision those, as well as making the
differences between different objects and persons clear. At times we
are even told which smell that dominates a scene. The following
quotation shows us a example of a description of a person Winston saw
in a café.
He was a monstrous man, with a mane of greasy greyhair, his face pouched and seamed, with thick negroid lips. At one time he musthave been immensely strong; now his great body was sagging, sloping, bulging,falling away in every direction. He seemed to be breaking up before one’s eyes,like a mountain crumbling.(1984, 1949. George Orwell, P. 44)
In
general Orwell only describes the most important buildings and
persons, while he just
mentions the common look of everything else in that area or on that
office. For example, he describes the view from Winston's window as
cold and colorless, despite the fact that the sky was intensely blue and the
sun shining. This gives the reader the feeling of a city without life
and hope. The mentioning of that the world looked cold
adds a sightly creepy character to the story, especially during the
night hours.
Outside, even through the shut window-pane, the world looked cold. Downin the street little eddies of wind were whirling dust and torn paper into spirals,and though the sun was shining and the sky a harsh blue, there seemed to beno colour in anything, except the posters that were plastered everywhere.(1984, 1949. George Orwell, P. 1)
What
we get to know is what Winston sees, feels and thinks. The number of
descriptive words are not few, but not that many either. Orwell might
have chosen to limit the descriptive words in order to make his story apply
to as many societies as possible. If the goal was to make people
aware of possible future conflicts between interest groups, such as
governments, and ordinary people, one can say he has done a good job
describing the environment.
Ok!
ReplyDeleteThe content appears complete and valid ideas are presented, which are supported by relevant and vivid examples from the book. Now the text is easier to grasp too. Good!