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George Orwell drew upon his wartime experiences when he came to write Nineteen Eighty-Four (1949) in the immediate aftermath of World War II. The drab, forbidding landscape of Winston Smith’s Oceania (subject of two films, the most recent o...
editorial, "Family Matters," for example, the analysis of the dangers of same-sex marriage is as convoluted as the language used to analyze it. Specifically, much more than the author's lack of concrete evidence to support his argument, Kmi...
Politics and the English Language," (1945). The paper shows that in this discourse, Orwell discusses the faults of modern English language regarding the gradual spread of vagueness and insincerity in the meaning of prose text. The paper sho...
essay appears in Joan Didion’s first collection of essays namely Slouching towards Bethlehem. It is a fine piece of literature in which the writer explains different aspects of New York City and compares it to her home town Sacramento. The...
exactly the same, hard to forget. The first reader of Orwell's manuscript, the publisher Frederic Warburg, undoubtedly had an impression of this type and editorial noted in its report that it was one of the scariest books I've read in my l...
George Orwell’s thoughts include taking things mostly from the point of view of the males such as their egoism, Virginia Woolf dwells by focusing on the feelings and thoughts of women. However, this difference does not outline a major signi...
British. He claimed that it is wickedness and he is completely in opposition to the oppressors i.e. the British. He put his experience in British-ruled India in the early Twentieth Century. At the time, he was a young, inexperienced soldie...