In Nineteen Eighty - 44 and Clockwork Orange, free will and abuse of power are two essentially interrelated themes that constantly penetrate and control what happens in both novels. Different reactions of different characters are interesting similarities between the two main characters of interest to George Orwell and Anthony Burgess, and Alex and Winston. Winston and Alex are very different, but they respond similarly to their environment related events as well.
"Brainwashing changes someone's beliefs and breaking their wishes, which is a whimsical gistopian novel from '1984' to 'clockwork orange', is this feat true in the real world What? For example, American soldiers were suffering severe long-term abuse at the Korean War POW camp, or living in a completely closed cult, "he said. Therefore, agreeing to this, Bucky will definitely be the victim of the brainwashing, Steve is not. Although it is radical, changing reality is contrary to his will, but because the new reality is very much looking at his behavior along his beliefs (again here we are going to do this new behavior I have not seen much. There are two questions and a problem with free comic day, one of which includes Red Skull and Kobik only.
Some of the most sharp technical criticisms now find in the brave new world of Arstric Huxley, the clockwork of Anthony Burgess, and the classics of literature currently thought to be syncope like the 19th of George Orwell can do. In Goethe's "Faust" Faust sold his soul to the devil in exchange for the power of the material world. It is often interpreted as a metaphor of industrial technology. Recent works of contemporary science fiction such as Philip K. Dick and William Gibson, and movies such as "Silver Wing Killer" and "Shell Ghost" influence the influence of technology on human society and identity It caused extreme inconsistencies and warnings.
In 1968, Orwell 's novel was published in 1949, and Orwell' s novel communicates the story of the government using technical supervision to monitor citizen 's actions and ideas. In Destopia society, '1984' seems to have all the technologies of today. Orwell believes that smart TVs, small digital cameras, and the Internet are human destinies. To my surprise, in 1984 it was over 40 years ago when the Internet appeared. As we have seen rapidly growing technology good or bad, Orwell's book uses it as reminding the power of technology as thoughtful.