Big Brother: All powerful governments or organizations to oversee and supervise people's behavior. When the government goes beyond its privacy boundaries and enters the lives of people who manage it, the result is a "brother" society. Americans live in democratic countries, but their governments take sudden measures, rights become privileged, security becomes surveillance, and Americans lose their freedom. Their government misleads them to believe they were not abused by the government, and most Americans have swallowed it.
"Big Brother" also shows another example of controlling people by planting nationalism in it. Big Brother solved the problem of society and used them by saying that other parties and cultures were the reason for their failure. This caused people's hatred and caused emotional reactions to other political parties and cultures. The way the government did this was very similar to the advertising strategy used by Adolf Hitler of Nazis and Joseph Stalin of communist Russia. Nationalistic propaganda is a way Big Brother psychologically manipulates the civilized population.
In the body of this article (intentionally) I do not mention Big Brother, but this is another reason to read this novel. Big Brother is a perfectly regulated government embarrassment. The "brother" administration used propaganda to fear civilians and to synchronize the public. "My older brother is watch over you" (5) is just one example of the many faction slogans that fear citizens. Big Brother uses various methods to capture people who have bad ideas. The term "brothers" is used in other literatures and other forms of media and communications.
An important aspect of the novel is "I saw my older brother". This fictitious "Big Brother" character was used as the government's face, even though they thought they were all alone, they were used to intimidate citizens to follow the doctrine of "Ingsoc". Residents are monitored at home, at work, and in all public places using monitors. These monitors are impossible to close and are seen as a sign of "thinking crime", a member of the community often opposed to the government.