George Orwell's novel in 1984 shows a persuasive scene that people can no longer control their lives. They are controlled by a more powerful government. As to the control of today's government, many people say that 1984 is not just an interesting novel. In fact, there are people who think this is a prophetic reality. In contrast, others believe that this is a novel that is regarded as satiric gold and is not very similar to our world today.
This article provides academic criticism of the new media culture compared with George Orwell's '1984'. The authors believe that some plot elements of "1984" are reflected in modern Western society. Some people claimed that these similarities are the result of new media technologies. Real-world governments use new media technologies to match Orwell's fictitious "brothers". The author will first describe the social and political patterns of Orwell 's written novels. The next section will introduce the latest ways in which government agencies use new media technologies as monitoring tools. The author believes that the US government uses new media technology as a propaganda tool. Through the use of new media, America is trying to limit the ability to reject people's stories.
George Orwell 's 1984 (1949) surprised the possibilities of the future of totalitarianism, and a deep glimpse. Orwell is a famous critic of Kestler 's friend. The novel has a strong political debate and that vision to the future even some prophecies in the modern democracy like the United States and the UK will become true. At noon of the Soviet Cleaning Test novel Arthur Koestler's darkness did not read well at bedtime. In addition, it is considered a historical novel that may be discussed with Owen Howe (Owen Ho wrote) which is "critical" in both history and novel: Kestler "gradually surrenders to his protagonist "Stalinistic description seems to be in conflict with the sense of human behavior purely" the dialectical process in my mind "," It is very difficult and complicated problem to be abstract and ultimate Moral terms "to simplify"