What is the difference between winston and julia




















Why does Winston keep a diary? Why does Winston think hope lies with the proles? How does the Party maintain its power? Who is Emmanuel Goldstein? What is Room ? I agree whole heartedly with Tecya. She has said is all. Julia and Winston really have nothing in common. They both want to rebell against the Party.

Julia's way to beat the party is by having sex with Party members. Winston's way of getting back at the party is writing in his diary, buying objects from the past, and making faces at telescreens. Winston would rather get a look back into the past. He wants to know what the Party has hidden from the rest of the world. Julia would rather not look at the past and she only wants to look at the future.

Winston hates the party and thinks it wise to really not do anything outside of work. Julia, however, would rather get into everything the Party has and look like a good Party girl. She barely has anything outside of work because she is into everything the Party is. Julie Champagne. I totally agree with Courtney. First of all, Julia is a lot younger than Winston is and she doesn't care about the past and why Winston is so upset by what the Party is hiding from people for example when he told her that he had some proof that the Party lied about Jones, Aaronson and Rutherford.

She doesn't think that it is a big of a deal that people find out about the truth while it is Winston's wish. Winston was born before the Revolution and know a lot more than her about the "normal" life.

Winston knows that the world didn't use to be like that and he hate the Party for that. Julia hates the party because she thinks that some rules are stupid, like forbidding sex and she just acts like she can do whatever she wants without being punished. The only thing that they have in common is that they both want to rebel and Julia knows a little bit about the past because of her grandfather who told her some stories.

Julia says that she knows if people are trustful just by looking in their eyes while Winston is scared of everybody except for O'Brien. I also agree with Stu when he says that Julia doesn't fear the party while Winston is completely scared of it.

Julia is a very open person and does not care what others may think of her, we found this out after she gave Winston the note. In conclusion, Miss Strangeworth thought that the town people were corrupt and evil, but it was actually her. Miss Strangeworth makes unethical decisions that lead to hurt feelings among the people in her town. Miss Strangeworth corrupts the relationships of the other people in town toward one another and towards her.

It is the faults in their characters that, not only makes them distinct, though is what leads to their ultimate fall at the end of each novel. Holden Caulfield and Jay Gatsby struggle with the present because they tend to reject reality by being overly self-interested.

Later on, they see each other and Julia has physically and mentally changed tremendously. She does not feel attracted to Winston anymore and does not want him to touch her. At the end of the novel, Julia does not love Winston. Many people are willing to go to the extent of lying about themselves to a man or a woman to impress them. In the novel The Great Gatsby, F. Scott Fitzgerald creates contrasts and similarities between Gatsby and George Wilson.

They are not the type of person their partner wants to marry, Gatsby made as much money as anyone could ever want but he still lacked the class that Daisy expected and required. As her cousin begins to slander Atticus, Scout loses her temper and, despite not understanding the boy, defends Atticus without considering any facts.

Even lack of evidence will not deter what she believes in her young spirit. Atticus Finch considers determination as a part of life, not a choice. Julia and Winston are similar in many aspects but also very different in others. Their main similarities that are propionate to me is they are both rebellions fatalism, in love affair with one another, and they both Hates the party.

As soon as I saw you I knew you were against them. One reading of this statement is as a coded admission that she works with the Thought Police. Charrington, who are revealed to be spies, Julia is never identified as working with the Thought Police, so it seems unlikely that her character is supposed to be read as a super-secret agent. As a result, even though Winston more strongly believes in the need to destroy the Party, Julia actually does more day-to-day to break the rules.

Julia has lots of contact with other people who do not obey the rules of the Party. Julia has had many secret lovers, and presumably some of these people supply her with contraband. Julia specifically mentions waiters and servants who work for the Inner Party and have access to contraband not usually available to the Outer Party.

By having a relationship that is not condoned by the Party with someone else who despises the Party, Julia is breaking the rules imposed by Oceania, which gives her more pleasure than anything else.

The diary is the first thing that Winston purchases from Mr. He writes in the diary to get his thoughts out in the only way he can without immediately being caught by the Thought Police although they do eventually find it.

Other Party members, however, do not consider the proles to even be human beings. The Party maintains its power primarily through language, technology, fear, and isolation. The language Newspeak allows the Party to control how its citizens think and talk.



0コメント

  • 1000 / 1000