Okay, I'm going to say it. I'm actually enjoying 1984 both as a work of fiction and as a very real portrait of concerns for the future.
I didn't like the other dystopia we read primarily because I did not care for the premise fear. The fear of technology is rather repugnant to me, but i have already waxed on about that more than enough.
1984 presents a legitimate fear of mine and I believe of many people with regards to the future.It recognizes that people.... Well, we kind of suck, don't we? We hate each other and start wars over petty things. You cant turn on the news without hearing about a shooting, murder, kidnapping or military tragedy. Utopia doesn't exist because we aren't good enough to make it, not even close.
This novel describes a possible scenario, in which an incredibly evil, or at best a terribly misguided but deeply charismatic group of people convince others to submit to unspeakable things in the name of creating a better world. Now this is something that could actually happen and a real fear.
We've seen horror stories about cult leaders like this, haven't we? Passionate and charming, they convince their followers of horrendous things and tell them they are happy, and they believe it. What if this happens on a massive scale? Couldn't it.... Hasn't it already dozens if not hundreds of times....Hitler of course comes to mind but haven't we been doing this as far back as recorded history can remember? People who slaughtered others in the name of ending suffering and bringing about a new world.
This is the phrase that chills me to the bone:
A war to end all wars.
Wednesday, April 10, 2013
Monday, April 8, 2013
2+2=5
Wow. Mind boggling. Terrifying.
Those are the three main thoughts
running through my head after finishing Book I of 1984.
We had a discussion about similar things once in AP U.S. History in
high school. We discussed how many people just accept what they hear
without questioning what is being said, and how this makes us as a
society rather gullible. This gullibility can be seen in the citizens
of Oceania.
During
that class period we also discussed how easy it could be for people
to alter history and how history is written by the “winners”.
(Such as with WWII and the camps in Europe AND the US) In Oceania
there is the Ministry of Truth, which alters history to match the
Party’s version or vision of past events. A Ministry of Peace,
which wages war because fighting comes before peace – or so we are
told. The Ministry of Plenty, which plans economic shortages but
tells everyone that we are doing great. And finally there is the
Ministry of Love, which I assume is where all the corrupt ideas and
actions of the government are kept hidden. All of these ministries
are frightening and can be seen in society today. Oceania's slogan:
“WAR IS PEACE; FREEDOM IS SLAVERY; IGNORANCE IS STRENGTH”
kind matches along what happens in the U.S. We go to war to “make”
peace. We “free” countries by enslaving them. And the people that
are ignorant of corruption, as the proles supposedly are, are
relatively happy. ← Ignorance is bliss, right?
The people of this society are so
controlled, so brainwashed that they cannot even have private
thoughts. I should rephrase that, private thought that are
anti-government. If I feared being caught and imprisoned every time I
had a thought that was against the current political leaders, I would
live in constant fear of being caught. They can't even have their
own, individual private thoughts. They will be told on by their young
spies. The kids are raised to tell on people that are doing “wrong”.
I remember being raised to not be a tattle-tale (which is what these
spies are). It was looked down upon.
I don't know, this is by far the worst
“utopia” we have read. I could have lived and been satisfied in
the World State, but Oceania is too corrupt
for me. I think our own politics are corrupt to the point that I
think we should just do away with political parties or political
associations. And Oceania seem twenty-thousand times worst.
Image 1: http://www.thesun.co.uk/sol/homepage/news/754538/Why-Britain-is-Great-Pub-Landlord-Al-Murray-Ignore-lecturers.html
Image 2: http://kairisoosaar.wordpress.com/2010/02/01/pr-and-propaganda/
Image 3: http://tigersoftware.com/TigerBlogs/June-13-2008/index.html
How Noble They Are
So I jumped ahead a bit and dove into 1984 over the weekend. It has been four years since I was assigned this book back in 11th grade and it is quite interesting seeing it through a new perspective. I have always loved this book so getting to read it is quite the treat. I am going to discuss something that happens in Book 2 so if you have not read past book 1, stop reading this post now!!!!!!
When I was laying in bed last night I was thinking about what I had read earlier that day. I kept going back to the point in the book when Winston and Julia meet at O'Brien's apartment. When they are confessing to all their anti-party actions and agree to so many terrible things that being in The Brotherhood would entail, I just gained so much respect for them. You may ask how I could have respect for someone who agreed, if the time and need came, to throw sulfuric acid in a child's face.
Yes, some of the deeds that Winston and Julia said they would be willing to do are absolutely terrible and rotten to the core, but the fact that they are standing up for what they believe for is very great indeed. Adding to my respect is the fact that they will not see the payoff of all their hard work. Ever. How noble it is to dedicate your life to a cause, risking vaporization every day in everything that you do and think, when you know and are told from the get-go that you will not see your hard work pay off.
I wish that I had the courage to live as Winston and Julia have agreed to. I wish that someday I feel so passionately about a cause that I am willing to go to extremes so that following generations will be able to reap the benefits of the seeds that I sowed.
This idea I can project onto our current generation's problem of global warming and pollution. Even though we are not seeing drastic and dire outcomes, further generations will. It is hard to devote oneself to something that they will never be able to enjoy. So many people have the mentality that they will never see the day when icebergs melt and the world floods, so why should they even try.
The thing is, each little step counts toward the bigger picture. People may not care about the environment or see the point in doing something that will only be beneficial years and years later, but if everyone contributes to the greater good, so many of our future relatives will be able to live a happy and healthy life like we have. I do not know about you, but I do not want to imagine a future where my great-great-great grandchildren will not be able to swim in the ocean because it is so polluted with toxic chemicals and trash.
Environmentalism is not illegal, but it is still a noble cause to work toward. I have so much respect for Winston, Julia, and every member of The Brotherhood for all their clandestine work against their overbearing government. People who truly stand up for what is right and just, even if it goes against everything they are told to do, will always have a high standing in my book. Even if actions they take to support their cause are secret and small, the risk that they are taking toward the end goal is very respectable.
When I was laying in bed last night I was thinking about what I had read earlier that day. I kept going back to the point in the book when Winston and Julia meet at O'Brien's apartment. When they are confessing to all their anti-party actions and agree to so many terrible things that being in The Brotherhood would entail, I just gained so much respect for them. You may ask how I could have respect for someone who agreed, if the time and need came, to throw sulfuric acid in a child's face.
Yes, some of the deeds that Winston and Julia said they would be willing to do are absolutely terrible and rotten to the core, but the fact that they are standing up for what they believe for is very great indeed. Adding to my respect is the fact that they will not see the payoff of all their hard work. Ever. How noble it is to dedicate your life to a cause, risking vaporization every day in everything that you do and think, when you know and are told from the get-go that you will not see your hard work pay off.
I wish that I had the courage to live as Winston and Julia have agreed to. I wish that someday I feel so passionately about a cause that I am willing to go to extremes so that following generations will be able to reap the benefits of the seeds that I sowed.
This idea I can project onto our current generation's problem of global warming and pollution. Even though we are not seeing drastic and dire outcomes, further generations will. It is hard to devote oneself to something that they will never be able to enjoy. So many people have the mentality that they will never see the day when icebergs melt and the world floods, so why should they even try.
The thing is, each little step counts toward the bigger picture. People may not care about the environment or see the point in doing something that will only be beneficial years and years later, but if everyone contributes to the greater good, so many of our future relatives will be able to live a happy and healthy life like we have. I do not know about you, but I do not want to imagine a future where my great-great-great grandchildren will not be able to swim in the ocean because it is so polluted with toxic chemicals and trash.
Environmentalism is not illegal, but it is still a noble cause to work toward. I have so much respect for Winston, Julia, and every member of The Brotherhood for all their clandestine work against their overbearing government. People who truly stand up for what is right and just, even if it goes against everything they are told to do, will always have a high standing in my book. Even if actions they take to support their cause are secret and small, the risk that they are taking toward the end goal is very respectable.
My Thoughts About Brave New World
I have to first say that I did enjoy reading this book.
Mainly because I like science-fiction type literature...or more likely
science-fiction type movies. In any case, this book really wasn't something I
took to heart. Yes, Huxley was trying to show his opinion of our future, but it
doesn't appall me like some others in our class. To me, it is a piece of
literature that someone created in order to make a good read. I do not necessarily
take his words literally or feel offended in any way.
That begin said, I do think that what he imagined happening
has begun to happen in our society. The one thing that seemed to be most
shocking was the idea of people being created in test tubes. I think that this
is unfortunately very possible in our future. We already have people who are conceiving
other people’s children and same sex couples having genetic-linked children
through surrogates and donors. This is a huge political and ethical debate,
which I am not going to get into. However, with technology and 'great' advances
come some serious consequences and side effects. To me this is a great idea to
help those that need it, but it is not a natural way. Things are bound to go
wrong. We also have scientist working hard to clone animals. How long until
they begin to clone people? What is going on now was not heard of one-hundred
years ago... what will happen to our scientific and medical advances in another
one-hundred years?
The book also is full of characters that constantly run away
from their problems and the truth. They use soma to escape the reality in which
they live. This has become America to perfection. Everywhere you look people
are getting surgeries to look or feel better, without having to do the 'hard
work', or they are taking drugs or drinking alcohol to escape from their
troubles. This is something I'm sure Huxley saw first-hand at the time he wrote
this book, but it continues today and at an even higher rate. There are more
pressures in our society to be the best, to be perfect, and to be better than
the next person that sometimes people cannot keep up and are consumed with the
'soma' of their choice.
This book also touches on the thought that a government that
controls everything is a slippery slope. If you ask me, that is exactly what
our government wants here. They want complete control over everything, even
though they already have much control. Is there any way to escape this? At
times I feel like we are all living in a world that is someone else's utopia.
We are all working hard every day, following the rules of the government, and
having the privileges to the America life... but at what cost? Don't get me
wrong I love living here in America. Lately, though it seems like freedom is a
distant piece of our past as the government tightens its reins on us.
I also liked how Huxley brought John into the book. Here was
a person who was unlike anything the society had seen before. He was a breath
of fresh air, someone who made them think if there was something more than what
they had. Many people in today’s society often question this same thing. Is there
something more than what I have here? Is there life on another planet? Are
there better opportunities for me in other places of the world? There is always
that inner nagging question of bettering oneself. I think that it is human
nature. Even in a utopia people are bound to search for more.
I think that I am pretty content with the life that I have.
Although I do question the government and some of the radical ideas that are
being presented with the technological advances, I am willing to hear about it
and learn about it.
I think this book was unique and interesting, but I did not
take it to heart. It is after all… fiction.
Word count: 680
Final Thoughts on Brave New World
I really loved the last
few chapters of Brave New World because if you hadn't yet picked up
on some aspects of this “utopia” they are really brought to light
here. Chapter 16 is one of my favorite chapters in this novel. This
is most likely due to the fact that I get angered by the concept of
consumerism over beauty. (The beauty of literature, or
art.)
Granted, I am not the most educated person when it comes to literature, but that does not mean I do not read great works by Shakespeare or Austen and others. They are beautiful pieces of art that can be related to modern times even though they written over a hundred years ago. The language is outdated, but the ideas, problems, behaviors all can be seen in society today -- they are even the basis of many plot lines of shows, movies, plays, and other novels! These historical novels have influenced so many aspects of our society that I cannot imagine reading and watching other things and NOT realizing that they have a relationship (in some way) to great works. And the fact that this society keeps them away because they are OLD an do not promote consumerism frustrates me to no end. Also, the citizens of the world state have infantile emotions and gratifications that would not allow them to appreciate great works of art. They would not be able to understand. How can a society take this away from people?! I understand they want stability, but emotions like love, anguish, heartbreak, happiness, etc are beautiful and develop a person. Why did they find this a fault in us? I believe it to be one of best qualities and what makes us human. These beings are just that, beings. They are not humans. They do not know what it means to be human nor should they deserve to be called human.
Chapter 18 also angers me. They want people to b happy and take pleasure or find amusement in the internal, personal anguish John is suffering through. They want to report on it and release feelies about it. It's absolutely disgusting. But then I feel that that is something we do today. We watch other people suffer and hurt themselves, but do not really help them. Why do we watch shows like Teen Mom? or 16 and Pregnant? TO FEEL GOOD ABOUT OURSELVES AND BE THANKFUL IT'S NOT US WHO HAS ALL THEIR PROBLEMS. This is a huge problem with society today. We like to see other people struggle, just to feel a little bit better about ourselves. EXACTLY like they are doing in the world state.
Knowing what I do and thinking about a life without the struggles I face in day to day seems horrifying. It would be interesting, but still horrifying. I am one of those people that always tries to have hope and be content or happy with everything I have, and I feel like I truly am. I don't want to live anywhere else. I don't want to be any one else. I want my family, friends, school, job, struggles, joy...everything. I don't know what the future may hold, but one thing I do know, is that I do not want to live in a world like world state.
Granted, I am not the most educated person when it comes to literature, but that does not mean I do not read great works by Shakespeare or Austen and others. They are beautiful pieces of art that can be related to modern times even though they written over a hundred years ago. The language is outdated, but the ideas, problems, behaviors all can be seen in society today -- they are even the basis of many plot lines of shows, movies, plays, and other novels! These historical novels have influenced so many aspects of our society that I cannot imagine reading and watching other things and NOT realizing that they have a relationship (in some way) to great works. And the fact that this society keeps them away because they are OLD an do not promote consumerism frustrates me to no end. Also, the citizens of the world state have infantile emotions and gratifications that would not allow them to appreciate great works of art. They would not be able to understand. How can a society take this away from people?! I understand they want stability, but emotions like love, anguish, heartbreak, happiness, etc are beautiful and develop a person. Why did they find this a fault in us? I believe it to be one of best qualities and what makes us human. These beings are just that, beings. They are not humans. They do not know what it means to be human nor should they deserve to be called human.
Chapter 18 also angers me. They want people to b happy and take pleasure or find amusement in the internal, personal anguish John is suffering through. They want to report on it and release feelies about it. It's absolutely disgusting. But then I feel that that is something we do today. We watch other people suffer and hurt themselves, but do not really help them. Why do we watch shows like Teen Mom? or 16 and Pregnant? TO FEEL GOOD ABOUT OURSELVES AND BE THANKFUL IT'S NOT US WHO HAS ALL THEIR PROBLEMS. This is a huge problem with society today. We like to see other people struggle, just to feel a little bit better about ourselves. EXACTLY like they are doing in the world state.
Knowing what I do and thinking about a life without the struggles I face in day to day seems horrifying. It would be interesting, but still horrifying. I am one of those people that always tries to have hope and be content or happy with everything I have, and I feel like I truly am. I don't want to live anywhere else. I don't want to be any one else. I want my family, friends, school, job, struggles, joy...everything. I don't know what the future may hold, but one thing I do know, is that I do not want to live in a world like world state.
Word Count: 552
Labels:
Ashley,
Brave New World,
End,
Life,
Literature,
Struggle
Sunday, April 7, 2013
Closing Remarks on Brave New World
Well, now that I have read the rest of Brave New World, I really don’t know how to feel about it except for appalled. Overall, this book angered me because this is essentially what Aldous Huxley thought that we were headed towards as a society and that is a scary thought. It shows that he doesn’t really have in hope in humanity. People are being manufactured in factories and bottles, they are being conditioned with ridiculous phrases on a daily basis, and being drugged so that they can overlook anything bad that they have experienced, so that they are kept in the state of mind of an infant. Although there was a lot of things that greatly troubled me when I was reading this novel, there was one idea that I liked in Brave New World that I would love to see enacted in our world and that is death conditioning. I think that the way that they condition the little kids to not be afraid of death in Brave New World is great. In the world we live in today, death is one of the top three fears if not the number one fear and I still don’t understand why people fear it. Maybe because it has such a negative connotation, but if bribing people with ice-cream bars while they are surrounded by the dying keeps them from fearing death, why not? With that being said, I think that Brave New World functions well as a dystopia because it is a huge warning about what can happen to society in the future.
So now I have started reading Nineteen eighty four and I haven’t gotten very far but this is a strange novel. My first understanding of it is that this world (Oceania?) is a place in which it is centralized on war. This place is a war generating machine filled with spies, and propaganda. I don’t know much about Winston yet, but I already find his character to be very frustrating only because in the novel, it says that he is somewhere in his thirties but I feel as if this story should be coming from a teenager or at least a pre-teen and it bugs me! But I have high hopes for this novel because I want to compare it to the other novels that we’ve read.
Technology: Society's Doom?
We see a lot of technology in Brave
New World. It seems to cause
some problems for them, but does it cause some for us, too?
I have a serious love-hate
relationship with technology. On one hand, it has made my life much
easier through my cell phone and has given me opportunities to
entertain myself through video games and Netflix. On the other hand,
it infuriates me and cripples our society.
On second thought, even the technology
that I love can tend to make me angry. When Hood College's trademark
email barrages at noon at five o'clock light up my phone like a
Christmas tree, I often want to throw it against the wall just to get
it to stop vibrating. When I begin losing a video game that I've
invested a lot of time in, I kinda get the feeling that I want to
throw my laptop out the window.
But maybe I'm just a sore loser.
Let's look at what technology has done
to the generation that follows ours. We boast that technology has
made children more connected and much smarter than we are. Perhaps
the children are more connected, but Facebook and other social media
are making it more difficult for them to communicate in face-to-face
encounters. My local Board of Education even considered creating a
mandatory “Social Relations” class in order to help kids develop
effective interpersonal skills.
A class for developing skills that come naturally for most people?! You've got to be kidding me!
Our boasting that they're smarter is
also kind of misplaced. First, I'm not even convinced that they know
more stuff. I went to school with kids who couldn't find Maryland on
a map of the USA and thought that Austria was located adjacent to
Massachusetts.
Second, these kids have sacrificed some
of their childhood innocence to get to where they're at (and remember
that their current intelligence may actually be worse than ours was).
Two years ago, I spent some time tutoring kindergarteners at my old
elementary school. Aside from the whole experience being extremely
throwbacky, I learned some things about how kids have changed in the
thirteen years since I had been in kindergarten.
These kids were swearing at each
other. Not the “Oops, it just slipped out in the moment” or the
“I don't know what this word means, but I'm going to say it anyway”
kinds of swearing. No, these kids knew what these words meant, and
they were hurling them at each other without getting in trouble.
Five-year-olds. Dropping the
f-bomb. I can't even articulate how much trouble that would have
gotten me while I was in kindergarten.
We've given the next generation cell
phones so they can stay in touch and computers so they can write
their papers. Instead, they have used their phones to spend our money
and used their computers to look at porn and play those silly
MMORPGs. The results of these choices stay with them for the rest of
their lives, hurting them, and in turn, society.
So, is technology the death of
society? The devices themselves are fine; it's how we've used them
that is hurting us. If society is damaged by technology, it will
ultimately be us, and not the
technology, that will be to blame.
(The first meme is from weknowmemes.com. The second is from blog.hsoi.com.)
(The first meme is from weknowmemes.com. The second is from blog.hsoi.com.)
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