Brainwashing in 1984 by George Orwell
Brainwashing in 1984 by George Orwell
Brainwashing in 1984 by George Orwell
INSTITUTE OF HUMANITIES
DEPARTMENT OF ENGLISH
Anna PECKA
Tarnw 2013
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CONTENTS
INTRODUCTION .................................................................................................................... 2
CHAPTER 1: Orwells Nineteen Eighty-Four and the concept of brainwashing ............... 3
1.1
1.1.1
1.1.2
1.1.3
1.2
1.2.1
1.2.2
2.1.1
2.1.2
2.2
2.2.1
2.2.2
2.2.3
Newspeak ............................................................................................................25
2.2.4
3.2
3.2.1
3.2.2
Uncertainty..........................................................................................................32
3.2.3
3.3
Imprisonment .............................................................................................................34
3.3.1
Interrogation........................................................................................................34
3.3.2
3.3.3
CONCLUSION ....................................................................................................................... 39
WORKS CITED ..................................................................................................................... 41
READING LIST ..................................................................................................................... 43
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INTRODUCTION
The subject of this project is the phenomenon of brainwashing in the dystopian novel
Nineteen Eighty-Four by George Orwell. It analyses the depiction of brainwashing on two
levels: collective (i.e. thought control performed on the entire society) and individual (i.e.
thought control performed as a secluded process on the protagonist of the novel). The main
purpose of this analysis is to explain why brainwashing depicted in George Orwells novel is
efficient and why it is one of the most significant images of totalitarian dream of absolute
power.
The whole project is divided into three chapters, where the first one provides the
background for the following analysis, and the remaining two consist in analysis itself.
The first chapter firstly provides the background for the term brainwashing: its history
and use, alongside with a short presentation of Robert Liftons eight totalist themes which are
referred to in the second chapter. Secondly, it presents the novel background, both in
historical context and in relation to the authors life and political views.
The second chapter focuses on brainwashing on a mass scale. It first characterizes the
structure of the totalitarian system of Oceania; then it presents main policies and goals of the
Party which provide the perfect background for mass brainwashing; and finally it analyses the
methods thanks to which Ingsoc manages to brainwash successfully the most of the society.
All those methods are analysed in terms of Liftons eight totalist themes.
The third chapter focuses on a case of individual brainwashing: the one performed on
Winston Smith. First, it shortly presents brainwashing as an actual process physically carried
out on an individual. Next, it provides the background and analysis for Winstons character
before his capture. In the end, it studies what happens to Winston during his imprisonment at
the Ministry of Truth, how it affects him, and how it leads to his final defeat.
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CHAPTER 1
Orwells Nineteen Eighty-Four and the concept of brainwashing
The basic aspects of this complex meaning will be discussed in the next section, along with an
outline of the terms rich history and varied use.
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1.1.1
Brainwashing is a relatively young term. Contrary to the popular belief, the term itself
was not created in the times of the Second World War but some time later, during the Korean
War, which broke out in 1950. The war, considered as a part of the Cold War, was an armed
conflict between North and South Korea. When North Korea (the Democratic Peoples
Republic of Korea), supported by the Chinese Communists, invaded South Korea (the
Republic of Korea), the newly created United Nations, led by the U.S.A., rushed to help the
South. Not long after the intervention, the U.S. government noticed that something bad had
happened to the soldiers who had been imprisoned by the enemy. Many of them came back
from the captivity to their mother country as truly and effectively converted Communists.
When interviewed, they could not think clearly and acted like human puppets. It was the CIA
operative Edward Hunter who investigated and described this phenomenon as brainwashing
for the first time (qtd. in Taylor 3). However, although brainwashing is a term invented in the
20th century, its origins reach much further into the past. Hunter observes that the word itself
has its roots in the Chinese concept of szu-hsiang-kai-tsao (translated as thought reform)
which was commonly used in Chinese Communists procedures in the 20th century and which
was originally invented in the fourth century BC, during the time of Meng Ko a Confucian
thinker who probably was the first to apply the word washing to human minds and souls
(Taylor 5).
Kathleen Taylor in her book Brainwashing: The Science of Thought Control notes
that, although at first neutral, the concept of thought reform quickly became associated with
notions of control and persuasion (7). Later on, it developed into the notion of thought
control. In fact, some examples of this kind of persuasion can be easily found in the Bible and
then in Shakespeares works. As soon as people became aware of their minds, instead of
killing anyone who disagrees with them or puts up resistance, they started trying to influence
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each other in order to gain control. The methods of such control through persuasion have been
effectively developed over the centuries, during the times of tribes, empires and totalitarian
regimes. In 1961, psychiatrist Edgar Shein even depicted the techniques of thought control as
coercive persuasion (qtd in. Taylor 7).
However, the concept of thought reform has not always had negative and coercive
associations. Taylor brings up the example of the 17th century English poet, Lucy Hutchinson,
who depicted the process of thought reform in a positive way, as an effect of her deep faith in
God she needed to erase all her former beliefs which were against the will of God in order
to accept the divine views (5). The American psychiatrist Robert Jay Lifton once pointed out
that, contrary to what we think, the Chinese Communists saw the process of thought reform as
a morally uplifting, harmonizing, and scientifically therapeutic experience (qtd. in Taylor
5). It shows us that, in fact, thought reform itself, at its core, is of a positive nature. The
process gained really negative associations much later, when the Chinese Communists started
to use it on the war prisoners against their will (Taylor 6). As a result of such actions, a new
term, which would describe the coercive nature of thought reform and the dangers which
grow from it, needed to be invented. And that is how the term brainwashing came into
existence.
Brainwashing is a more complex and ambitious term than persuasion, thought reform
or thought control themselves, but it certainly contains their elements. Hunter observes that
the new term includes the victims complete submission without any indications of free will
to the propaganda of those who perform the act of brainwashing. He refers to brainwashing as
a kind of mental rape (qtd. in Taylor 4).
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1.1.2
Although the term has its roots in communism, we most commonly associate it with
totalitarianism in general. It is commonly assumed that totalitarian governments tend to use
the process of brainwashing both to break dissidents resistance and to keep absolute control
over their citizens. Even if totalitarian governments of the Second World War did not have a
specific word for their actions, now we certainly can identify them as brainwashing. However,
seeing the term only as a totalitarian dream of the perfect weapon to control society is not
enough. It is only one of the four main uses of the term, which Kathleen Taylor singles out in
her study. To understand the term well, we should be aware of all of them (8-9).
First of all, brainwashing can be used in a political sense as a term of mental abuse
(Taylor 8). In fact, that was its original and most common use. It can be seen as a Statecontrolled process administered by a totalitarian regime against dissidents, whether citizens or
foreigners (Taylor 6). However, with the passage of time, the term became much more
complex, and soon it exceeded its original political boundaries; as a result, it started to appear
also in reference to smaller groups or even to individuals. Nevertheless, as the term has its
roots in politics, it can never be completely separated from it. Taylor acknowledges that
brainwashing in the political sense can mean different things to different people depending
on their background and agenda (8).
Secondly, it can be used as a functional description of a scientific process which
takes place in the human brain (Taylor 9). Although scholars are still arguing whether
brainwashing as a scientific and psychological process actually exists, it can already be
described as a set of real techniques used to change or control ones thoughts (Taylor 9).
Thirdly, brainwashing can be used as a name for a totalitarian dream. It may be seen as
a fantasy of being in possession of an ultimate tool to control not only citizens behaviour but
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also their thoughts and minds (Taylor 9). The dream assumes that there is a perfect way to
turn a thinking and independent human being into an obedient puppet a mental slave.
Finally, it can be used as a concept of last resort. In this case, we tend to use the
term in order to explain something extraordinary and unusual, instead of searching for a real
explanation. For instance, it is quite natural for people to try to see voluntary mass suicide as
a result of mass brainwashing. It is the first thing that comes to our minds (Taylor 9).
Of course, as it was mentioned at the beginning of this chapter, nowadays we also use
the term brainwashing to ironically criticise someones stupidity, naivety or inability to think
for themselves. Although we obviously are aware that this word is not a positive one, we do
not seem to fully realize how many threats the actual process of brainwashing can pose.
As this project is an attempt to analyse a novel depicting a totalitarian society, it will
focus mostly on the third use of the term, applying it to a totalitarian ultimate way to exercise
complete control over people.
1.1.3
To better understand the totalitarian idea of brainwashing, a deeper insight into the
totalitarian system and its mechanism is needed. Robert Jay Lifton, in his study Thought
Reform and the Psychology of Totalism (1961), described his own idea of thought reform,
based on observations of the proceedings of the Communist party in China during the Korean
War. He listed and depicted eight totalist themes as ways to effectively perform a thought
reform (qtd. in Taylor 17). The themes are as follows:
1. Milieu control its aim is to control ones perception of reality through
manipulating their communication with the outside world. As a result, the victims
brain receives controlled impulses and reads them as proper ones.
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regime. The next chapter of this project will focus on applying those eight themes to the
totalitarian society depicted in George Orwells novel Nineteen Eighty-Four.
1.2.1
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To understand the concerns presented in the novel, we need to know what the world
looked like at the time when the novel was written. In the late 40s of the 20th century, the
world was still trying to regain its balance after the Second World War. During the war, the
world observed how close Hitlers totalitarian Germany was to taking power over the whole
Europe, and it made many people realize how destructive for individuals such political
systems could be. After the war, when Germany got defeated, peaceful times were supposed
to come. Instead, influences of Communism and the Soviet Union in Eastern Europe started to
increase significantly. Two years after the end of the Second World War, the world had to
face a completely new kind of war the Cold War.
The division of the post-war world into democratic and communist parts was an
indirect result of new views on socialism. The modern notion of economical and political
socialism emerged among the working classes in the 18th century and developed over the
years of turbulent political changes. The main and the most basic version of modern socialism
assumes that, as the mechanical and technological advancement makes everything easier to
get, every person should have equal living conditions. Supporters of that new approach
demanded that the economic and political systems based on private ownership (capitalism) be
replaced with a system based on social ownership (socialism). The innocent and beautiful
idea of social justice, where everyone gets what they deserve, led to the first political
movements designed to put that idea into action. As making the dream come true turned out
to be more difficult than it had seemed, the different ways of realizing the idea resulted in the
formation of communism. At the beginning both political movements, socialism and
communism, were very similar, but with the passage of time, especially after the First World
War when the Soviet Union started to develop, communism in many aspects started to
resemble the rule of terror and dictatorship.
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However, during the time between the Great War and the Second World War, not only
was the new nature of communism revealed, but also a new political movement called
fascism was created. It was founded in Italy when Mussolini, the leader of Italian fascists,
used the bad situation of the country after the war, gained support by promises of better living
conditions and took over the reins. Soon afterwards, he became a fascist dictator and made
Italy the first totalitarian country. The new political system actually helped Italy to restore its
power after the war. Later, a similar scenario recurred in Germany when Adolf Hitler gained
power. This event led to the formation of a new variation of fascism Nazism, which, later
on, became the main reason for the Second World War.
To sum up, the political systems in Europe in the first half of the 20th century were
changing very quickly. Due to the growing power of the Soviet Union in the 40s and the
Cold War which lasted almost 50 years, the idea of true and pure socialism was lost.
Russian Communists were discovered to have used the ideas of socialism under false
pretences in order to gain absolute power. Democratic countries were strongly against
communism, while communists themselves firmly believed that it was the ideal political
system. The growing tension between those two opposite systems led to the division of the
world into two hostile parts democratic and communist. The Iron Curtain was created and
Eastern Europe, under the strong influence of the Soviet Union, became cut off from the rest
of the world. In the West new discussions about politics, especially about totalitarianism,
communism and socialism, were held people wondered what Russian communists plans
were. As the tension kept growing and both sides were getting ready for a possible armed
conflict, the fear of the next worldwide war was spread. Also, as people from the West did not
really know what life looked like on the other side, they started guessing. As a result,
everyone became naturally interested in politics. And George Orwell was not an exception.
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Nineteen Eighty-Four touches upon political topics that derive from the political
conditions and events of the war and post-war time. Although it was, and still widely is, read
just as a warning against totalitarianism, it actually reaches deeper and, as a political novel,
presents the whole detailed machinery of totalitarianism the political and social system
which originated in the idea of socialism. Despite the passage of time, the novel is still
relevant in that it shows the threat to the individual and to the human mind which can be
posed by any kind of totalitarianism.
1.2.2
Another important key to appreciating and understanding the novel is the authors life
and his views on historical events.
Eric Arthur Blair, better known by his pen name George Orwell, was born on 25 June
1903 in Motihari, Bengal, India. His family, as he himself put it, was of the lower-uppermiddle class i.e. the upper-middle class which lacks money and cannot independently
afford to live on an upper level (Crick 58). When he was four, his family moved to England
and at the age of eight he was sent away to preparatory school at St. Cyprians, which had an
enormous impact on his life. Far away from home, and thrown into a completely new and
hostile world, he became extremely miserable and lonely. He got abused by other students
and felt guilty about not being able to keep up with all the expectations he was supposed to
meet (Meyers 23). However, in spite of these childhoods horrors, he managed to win a
scholarship to Eton.
After leaving the public school, where he did not have good marks and did not reveal
any hints of literary talent, in 1922 he joined the Indian Imperial Police in Burma. He spent
five years working there. Back in England, in the autumn of 1927 he decided to live among
the poor on the streets of London. A few months later he moved to Paris, where he lived in
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the working-quarter of the town until he fell ill with pneumonia and had to be hospitalized for
several weeks. After recovery, he taught in two small private schools in England but, due to
his poor health, he soon had to resign.
After his first novel Down and Out in Paris and London (1933) was published, he
wrote book reviews for the Adelphi magazine. Then, for one year and a half, he worked parttime in a Hampstead bookshop. In 1936 he gave up the job and, asked by the Left Book Club,
went to northern England to write about its economical and social conditions. The Road to
Wigan Pier, which described this journey, was published in 1936.
In June 1936 he married Eileen OShaughnessy, and five months later he went to
Spain to take part in the Spanish Civil War. On 10 May 1937 he got shot through the throat
and was taken back to England. In 1938, due to his defective lungs, he fell ill with
tuberculosis, which, later on, prevented him from fighting in the Second World War.
Nevertheless, he managed to become a sergeant in St. Johns Wood Home Guard battalion in
1940.
From 1941 to 1943 he worked for the Indian Section of the BBC as a Talks Producer,
where he broadcast British propaganda to Anglophile Asians. After quitting the job at the
BBC, he became a literary editor of the Tribune, where he had his own, famous column
named As I Please. In 1944 he tried to publish one of his most famous works the satire
Animal Farm. For political reasons, the publishing houses kept turning him down. The
novella got finally published in August 1945, right at the wars end, and it quickly became a
worldwide-famous title.
However, Orwells literary achievement did not harmonize with his personal life. In
1944, as he and his wife could not have their own children, they decided to adopt a baby.
Richard Horatio Blair was one month old when he became a part of the Orwells family. In
February 1945, while Orwell was abroad working as a correspondent for the Observer from
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France and Germany, his wife suddenly died. Orwell came back home and had to bring up
their son on his own.
In 1946 his younger sister Avril settled down with them to help her brother out. In
winter they moved to the island of Jura in the Hebrides, where Orwell started working on his
last novel. At the same time he fought with a deadly illness. It took him 27 months to write
Nineteen Eighty-Four. The novel was published in June 1949. Orwell did not live to see the
novels success. He died on 21 January 1950.
Orwells biography can provide us with important insights which may be crucial to the
understanding of the importance and genius of his works.
First of all, George Orwell was a great observer of reality. Jeffrey Meyers in A
Readers Guide to George Orwell points out that he did not have great powers of
imagination and could write only about things he had actually observed, so he deliberately
sought out material he could write about and used every scrap of experience in his books
(18). Thus, each of his novel is based on his life experiences and personal observations:
Burmese Days (1930) described his job as an Imperial Policeman and the hatred of
imperialism which he gained from it; Down and Out in Paris and London is based on his
experience while living among the poor; Homage to Catalonia, based on his participation in
the Spanish Civil War, is considered as one of his greatest works. Many literary critics claim
that Nineteen Eighty-Four contains a combination of all his experiences, with his traumatic
childhood at St. Cyprians at its core (Crick 41). However, Bernard Crick, his biographer,
observes that, although his personal experiences can be noticed, the novel should be seen
neither as his last testament nor as a summary of his life but as a masterpiece of political
speculation (570).
Secondly, Orwell was not only a novelist, but also a great essayist. In less than twenty
years he published over seven hundred articles in different sorts of magazines (Meyers 37).
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Many of them, such as Why I Write or Such Such Were the Joys, are considered to be the
ultimate keys to his personality and his novels.
Thirdly, George Orwell, although born in India, was a real Englishman. He loved his
country and saw himself as a real patriot, but not as an imperialist, which he frequently
emphasized (Crick 22). Throughout his whole life he was concerned with his countrys past,
present and future, which is especially noticeable in his essays on English national character
Lion and the Unicorn and The English People (Crick 23).
Finally and most importantly, Orwell was very interested in politics. He saw himself,
and still is seen, as a political writer. Crick even identifies him as one of the three greatest
political writers in the canon of English Literature, together with Thomas Hobbes and
Jonathan Swift (26). He also emphasizes that Orwell, apart from being a writer, was also a
political thinker (25). Orwell himself believed that writing cannot be separated from politics.
In his Why I Write essay (1946) he lists four great motives for writing including political
purpose, which, as he admits, was what his first works were lacking (184). He points out that
during most of his life he was not sure what his political attitude really was. Experiences such
as working in the Indian Imperial Police in Burma or living among the poor made him wellaware of the existence and conditions of the working class and certainly strengthened his
hatred towards authority in general, but it was not until the Spanish Civil War that he realized
what his political purpose really was. He writes: Every line of serious work that I have
written since 1936 has been written, directly or indirectly, against totalitarianism and for
democratic socialism (186). This sentence is probably one of the most important keys to a
proper interpretation of his last novel.
In Nineteen Eighty-Four Orwell not only presented his own political views and gave
us a warning against totalitarianism which could arise even in such a country as England
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(Crick 568) but he also introduced a new dimension of the modern slavery: the slavery of the
mind.
Although the term brainwashing came into existence only after the publication of his
last novel, Nineteen Eighty-Four seems to contain one of the most impressive fictional
descriptions of brainwashing, not only in terms of one individual case but also in terms of a
whole society.
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CHAPTER 2
Power control over society in Nineteen Eighty-Four
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2.1.1
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of heredity but on the basis of their efficiency, dedication and loyalty towards the
government.
The rest of the society i.e. around 85% of the Oceanic population consists of the
lowest social class called the proles. They are referred to as the dumb masses: uneducated
and living on the edge of poverty, they are incapable of thinking and completely ignorant
towards politics (Orwell 217). Although they make the biggest percentage of society, they are
completely insignificant in the eyes of the Party. They are not even able to think about any
kind of rebellion because they do not realize that the world they live in could be any different.
Thus, the government holds a belief that as long as they remain uneducated, poor and
involved only in their own lives, far outside the politics, they will remain unconscious of their
own power and, at the same time, harmless to the Party. Then, since they cannot pose any real
threat to the authority, the government is entirely indifferent towards them.
2.1.2
The Party follows the political ideology called Ingsoc. As we learn from Goldsteins
book, Ingsoc the abbreviation of English Socialism is one of the three main political
movements in the presented world, which all originated in the idea of socialism, but whose
real common purpose is to arrest progress and freeze history at a chosen moment (Orwell
213). The Partys hypocritical ideology of social justice is in fact focused on perpetuating
unfreedom and inequality (Orwell 212). Therefore, the policies of the Party are aimed at
controlling every aspect of the society: from politics and economics to not only peoples
behaviours, but also their own beliefs and thoughts.
The two chapters of Goldsteins book that Winston manages to read, provide us with
the historical and sociological background for such aims. We learn that the shape of the
presented world and the need for the hierarchical structure of the society, as well as the use of
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totalitarian methods to maintain it, are natural consequences of historical changes. Over the
ages, ruling classes were constantly searching for a way to permanently maintain the power.
With the development of machinery and technology in the 19th and 20th century, the economic
equality among people started to be technically possible to achieve. However, although the
promise of equality was often the main reason for the ruling class to wield the power over
weaker classes, the political thinkers of the 20th century came to the conclusion that equality is
no longer desirable. They realized that to permanently maintain power and order in society,
the hierarchical structure and inequality between classes is indispensable. Thus, they returned
to authoritative ways of ruling, claiming that they were progressive. From totalitarian systems
of the early 20th century soon originated a new political movement, mirrored in all three super
states governments. The new system differed from the old one in its main goals and methods
of maintaining power.
To begin with, the newly established political system needed to somehow abolish the
possibility of economic equality. They needed to lower the standards of peoples living so that
the economic differences would justify the class division of society. As the development of
technology could not be reversed, they decided to use up the products of the machine
without raising the general standard of living (Orwell 196). And they became conscious of
the fact that the only way to achieve it was by maintaining the state of ceaseless war. Thus, in
the presented world, Oceania is in constant military conflict with one of the two superstates:
Eurasia or Eastasia. Paradoxically, the state of permanent war between the three superstates
brings peace and continuity to the structure of societies. The lack of interest in heredity
mentioned earlier originates in the Partys belief that [w]ho wields power is not important,
provided that the hierarchical structure remains always the same (Orwell 218).
With the hierarchical structure already accomplished, the ruling group needed to find
the ultimate way to maintain their power permanently. Through the scrupulous analysis of the
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history, they came to the conclusion that the only ultimate control could be attained by total
control over peoples minds and thoughts. If you could control what people believe in, you
could easily eliminate any indication of resistance. Accordingly, the government would be
impossible to overthrew and, in a sense, the Party would exist endlessly. OBrien, who
represents the Party after Winstons arrest, believes that [w]e control matter because we
control the mind. Reality is inside the skull. Thus, one of the main aims of the Partys
policies is to find an ultimate way to control peoples minds.
However, only Winstons sessions with OBrien reveal the true aim of all the Partys
principles. Goldsteins book entitled The Theory and Practice of Oligarchical Collectivism
just indicates the main belief of the Party that the collectivism is the only way to a successful
and consistent oligarchy. We learn about the core belief later on from OBriens mouth: the
Party seeks power entirely for its own sake (Orwell 275). Ingsoc assumes that the real key to
power lies in collectivism and absolute rejection of individuality. OBrien explains to
Winston that [t]he individual only has power in so far as he ceases to be an individual
(Orwell 277). They believe that collectivism and independence from individuals make the
Party immortal i.e. the system exists outside time and outside the human beings; it exists
entirely for itself, independent from any external factors. Thus, the crucial aim of the Partys
policies is to achieve that permanent, absolute power for its own sake.
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This section will shortly present the main effective ways in which the government, as
a system based entirely on lies, tries to achieve its primary goal by brainwashing the society.
2.2.1
To start with, in Orwells world both propaganda and surveillance are inseparable
thanks to the invention of telescreen which not only broadcasts but also receives and
transmits. Since such a device is present in every home, office and social building in Oceania,
and there is no possibility of switching it off, a citizen is not only ceaselessly flooded with the
Partys propaganda but also constantly invigilated. It is also worth noting that the Party uses
propaganda to propagate surveillance. One of the most popular slogans of Ingsoc Big
Brother is watching you (Orwell 4) popularizes surveillance, at the same time emphasizing
that it is an integral part of Partys policies (Yeo 55).
Both propaganda and surveillance work in Oceania on three levels. Pervasive
propaganda is the first level of manipulation. The most effective political propaganda should
be able to convince people that the information presented by the government is ultimately true
and right. More orthodox members of the Party are very susceptible to that kind of
manipulation, and it is usually sufficient enough to keep them under control, but there are less
malleable members on whom propaganda does not work. Hence, when the first level fails,
surveillance, which covers next two levels, takes the lead.
Surveillance can be divided into panoptical and surreptitious (Yeo 53). The word
panoptical originates in the concept of an institutional building called panopticon which
was designed by English philosopher, Jeremy Bentham. The conceptual design assumes that a
watchman is able to observe all inhabitants while they cannot see him they know they can
be watched at any time, but they are never sure when it actually happens. Thus, the point of
panoptical surveillance, which covers the second level of manipulation, is based on self
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guarding (Yeo 53). In Oceania, telescreen stands for a watchman: citizens are aware that they
can be watched and heard at any given moment, but they never know when exactly, so they
remain obedient. In this case, even a doubtful citizen, such as Winston, is forced to watch
himself in the presence of a telescreen. However, when panoptical surveillance also fails, the
last, third dimension of manipulation, in the form of surreptitious surveillance, is put into
action. This type of surveillance works in reverse: it is based on the lack of self guarding. A
citizen who undergoes it needs to be unaware of the fact that he is invigilated. Only with
certainty of being in a private and safe place, the possible offender of the Party can reveal his
true thoughts and intentions (Yeo 55). In the world of Ingsoc, surreptitious surveillance is
embodied by the Thought Police a secret police force whose job is to recognize citizens
thoughts, track their true intentions and eliminate any trace of thought crime (Orwell 219).
This last level of manipulation enables the Party to supervise and control not only peoples
every day behaviours but also thoughts and beliefs.
To sum up, propaganda and surveillance in Orwells world depict at least two of
Liftons totalist themes: milieu control and the primacy of doctrine over person. As
Oceanic propaganda is pervasive and the Party controls every piece of press and media,
citizens perception of reality is completely dependent on the government (Orwell 222).
Meanwhile ceaseless surveillance makes the whole society aware that any personal opinion,
or belief inconsistent with the Partys policies, is not allowed. Every citizen knows that
individual thinking is undesirable; whatever the Party claims to be true needs to be true.
2.2.2
Historical negationism
Winstons job in the Records Department at the Ministry of Truth consists in rewriting history and falsifying facts that could be seen as untruthful to the Partys infallible
claims. The whole Ministry of Truth concerns itself with broadly understood propaganda.
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Many different departments within it produce all the news, literature, music and art in strict
accordance with Partys desires. The main task of the Records Department is to alter or negate
the past. Day by day, Winston is forced to alter old records, following the scrupulous
instructions from the above.
The negation of the past in Oceania, likewise surveillance, is strictly connected with
Partys propaganda, because it is one of its main subjects. One of the Partys slogans says:
Who controls the past, controls the future: who controls the present, controls the past
(Orwell 37). Once again, this piece of propaganda reveals Partys policies: historical
negationism is yet another way for Ingsoc to achieve its primary goal.
The Party believes that past events (...) have no objective existence, but survive only
in written records and in human memories (Orwell 222). Thus, since Partys pervasive
propaganda encompasses all the existing records, Ingsoc is in total control of the past. Such
control enables the Party to stop the history and simultaneously stop time (Clune 40). This
claim seems to be an extension of OBriens belief that the Party, independent from
individuality, is immortal and exist outside time. Indeed, if the Party is able to freeze time at
the given moment and completely negate the history, Ingsoc could, in a sense, exist forever.
Goldsteins book gives us two reasons for the importance of such negation. Firstly, it
secures the Partys reliability, not only in terms of their predictions and promises but also in
terms of their invariable policies. Secondly, it leaves the Partys members totally unaware of
their actual situation. As the past can be altered in whatever way the Party pleases it to be,
citizens of Oceania have no standards of comparison (Orwell 221). As a result, the Oceanic
government manages not only to separate people from other countries but also from their own
past.
Summing up, the negation of the history, together with the policy of permanent war,
represents another totalist theme called the demand for purity. Without either historical or
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geographical possibility of comparison, Oceanic society carry on their existence in the fond
belief that their way of living is much better than others. The Party makes sure that people,
when aware of other countries, associate it only in a negative sort of way.
2.2.3
Newspeak
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the Party is to use conscious deception while retaining the firmness of purpose that goes with
complete honesty (Orwell 223). The full understanding of almost every Ingsocs slogan
requires the use of doublethink.
In terms of Liftons criteria, the concept of doublethink perfectly realizes the theme of
scared science. Thanks to the application of this technique, citizens of Oceania, in spite of
facts, are able to unconditionally and truly believe that the Partys dogma is not only the
highest, but also the only possible, infallible authority.
2.2.4
In coordination with methods listed above, the Oceanic government also makes perfect
use of such ways of manipulation as demonstrations and rigour.
First of all, propaganda, together with surveillance, makes it possible for the Party to
impose a fixed order of the day on every single citizen. Therefore, all Party members have
predetermined waking and bed-time hour, strictly defined lunch breaks, the duty to take part
in every-day exercises, called Physical Jerks, and the obligation to attend special meetings
at Community Centre. The strictly imposed order of the day, as well as rationing food and
goods, makes their existence completely dependent on the Party; and that stands for another
totalist theme: the dispensing of existence.
Secondly, as we learn from Winstons memories about his wife, a Party member is not
supposed to have any personal feelings or desires, especially sexual ones. The abolition of
such natural instincts and frustration that is connected with it serve as a fuel for sheer
demonstration of hatred towards Partys enemies and true devotion towards Big Brother
during such events as the daily Two Minutes Hate or annual Hate Week. Such demonstrations
provide us with yet another totalist theme, called mystical manipulation.
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Finally, to perpetuate the motivational fear and respect among citizens, the Party
makes popular events out of traitors trials and hangings. Many arrested dissidents are forced
to make a public confession in front of a camera. It not only helps the Party to maintain the
general obedience but also depicts Liftons theme of the cult of confession.
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CHAPTER 3
Winstons brainwashing case study
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In Oceania, the process of thought reform is carried out when every other method of
massive manipulation fails. Thus, the subjects of such a process are thought criminals, i.e.
citizens who manifest politically incorrect thoughts and are immune to widely spread
propaganda and surveillance. Once captured by the Partys secret service the Thought
Police a thought criminal ends up in the Ministry of Love, where interrogations and torture,
both physical and psychological, take place.
To see how the process works and why it was performed on Winston, we need to look
more thoroughly at his personality, attitudes, reasons for rebellion and the way the system
affects him.
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The situation changes a little when he meets Julia, a rebellious young woman, and falls
in love with her. The lovers quickly unite in their fight against the Party, gradually extending
their individual, private space: first, by their timid and cautious meeting in the forest, and
then, by a bold act of renting a room above Charringtons old junk shop. Shortly after OBrien
approaches Winston and reveals himself as a part of the underground resistance movement
called The Brotherhood, Julia and Winston join forces with him.
Although Winston turns out to be one of the citizens who are immune to brainwashing
on a mass scale, he does not stay completely unaffected by the system. In fact, his final defeat
is gradually and symbolically foreshadowed, right from the very beginning of the novel.
3.2.1
The most important and distinctive feature of Winstons character is his obsession
with the past and history. Since his work at the Ministry of Truth consists in falsifying
historical records, he is well-acquainted with the Partys methods of altering and re-shaping
history. Due to the fact that he himself is old enough to dimly remember some minor events
or at least atmosphere of the times before and during Revolution, he becomes aware that even
the more distant history must have been altered by the Party. Thus, he obsessively seeks for
proofs that would confirm his suppositions and make the downfall of the Party possible.
Winston perceives history as the key to effective resistance.
However, during one of his conversation with Julia, Winston discovers that his desire
to reconstruct the past is completely incomprehensible for citizens as she, who do not
remember the times before the Party. Julia, who is much younger than Winston, represents a
new generation which takes the existence of the Party for granted and does not want to
overthrow it. For Julia, a successive manipulation of the system is rebellious enough. She
does not really understand the ideas and dreams that Winston has. Such a distinction between
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them indicates that Winstons mind belongs to the previous generation. He is the last person
that could use that connection to the past as a motive for rebellion (Phelan 102).
Every defiant action of Winston in the novel is driven by his powerful nostalgia for
history; his yearning for the past is the main reason for the resistance to the Party.
Nonetheless, Winston chases the past also on a personal level. He does not know much about
his own history, but he is constantly tormented by the vague and fragmented memories of his
childhood and his lost family. It seems as if together with disappearance of his parents, he got
deprived of his own origin, which results in the lack of personal and historical background
(Fukuhara 29). Hence, another reason for his obsession with the past is a sheer belief that by
reconstructing history, he can also reconstruct his own, lost identity (Fukuhara 27). Thus,
Winston is not only a rebel, but also a troubled man who constantly looks for his true self.
To conclude, Winston believes that the real, unaltered past and the accurate historical
knowledge of the world stands for the ultimate truth (Dwan 388). And this truth, once
discovered, is supposed to contribute to the overthrow of the Party, as well as to help him find
his lost identity. However, the Partys methods for annihilating the past turn out to be
significantly efficient; although Winston does his best to find some external proofs for his
arguments among proles, he is unable to succeed. His only real proof consists in his own
memories that are irrelevant to the external world (Dwan 388).
The impossibility to prove his beliefs results in the lack of any sense of certainty.
Winston is confused and not sure whether he can believe his own mind. And such uncertainty
proves that, just as every other citizen of Oceania, although surely to a lesser degree, Winston
is also affected by the system.
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3.2.2
Uncertainty
One of the Partys biggest and the most effective tool for sufficient brainwashing is
uncertainty (Taylor, 21). By the Partys sufficient manipulation of the environment, citizens
of Oceania are completely dependent on the government. Values and notions such as privacy,
friendship, family, individuality or law are completely irrelevant to reality, and that makes
people uncertain of their own personalities. Additionally, the alternation of the past deprives
every even the most personal memory of its historical and sociological authenticity; and
that, in turn, leads to the loss of personal identity (Bouet 8). To put it in other words,
uncertainty turns Oceanic nationals into human puppets, susceptible to any form of the Partys
manipulation.
The fact that such uncertainty manifests itself also in the figure of Winston is an
excellent example of how the Party annihilates any sense of individuality among their
citizens. Although Winston is a rebel, and he does fight for his beliefs and independent ideas,
his uncertainty turns out to be his most significant weakness which, in a sense, enables his
successive conversion at the Ministry of Love.
3.2.3
The trap
However, the first thing that seems to at least partially break Winstons resistance is
the trap that the Party set for him, and of which he is not aware for the most of the novel.
Almost from the very first pages, Winston develops and cherishes the idea that the
Party cannot really control your mind. The significant dream about the gesture of protection
made by his mother towards his little sister reveals his belief in the existence of some
personal, inner space where you can be protected from the invasive force of the Party
(Fukuhara 29). Also the paperweight, which Winston buys in Charringtons shop, and which
is a clear symbol of history and his yearning for former golden times, represents this secure
Pecka 33
part of human personality, where independent thoughts and personal secrets are safe and
private. All his doings, from writing a diary, through the affair with Julia, to joining up the
resistance movement, are connected both with his obsession with the past and the idea of the
freedom of the mind (Fukuhara 30).
During one of their conversations, Julia says to Winston: Its the one thing they cant
do. They can make you say anything anything but they cant make you believe it. They
cant get inside you (Orwell 174). Both of them seem to cling to that idea. They are truly
convinced that the Party cannot get inside them.
Winston and Julia face up to the possibility of their capture. They take it for granted,
knowing that sooner or later the Thought Police will catch them. Winston even calls them
dead (Orwell 183). They both are aware that once they are caught, they will not see each
other ever again. They accept the fact that they will probably end up dead.
Nevertheless, their capture comes as a shock to Winston, and it happens not because
he has not expected it, but because he suddenly realizes that almost everything he believed in
was a well-set trap. It suddenly becomes obvious that the whole time spent in the rented room
passed in the presence of the telescreen. The Party could arrest them days earlier, but instead
they played with them, deliberately letting them hope that the resistance is possible.
Additionally, it turns out that Mr Charrington, of whom Winston thought as another extinct
animal of the golden past (Orwell 153), is, in fact, the agent of the Thought Police. Thus,
also the old song that Mr Charrington introduced to Winston, and which he also perceived as
a distinctive element of the past, turns out to be a deception (Fukuhara 30). Winston gets
deceived by the Party.
The act of smashing the paperweight, the symbol of history and his belief in immunity
of ones mind, is in itself symbolic. The paperweight is crushed as well as the part of
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Winstons beliefs in the past (Fukuhara 30). It seems not only to accurately mirror the
situation, but it also foreshadows following events.
3.3 Imprisonment
Once Winston gets captured, he quickly realizes that he has already lost his battle
against the system. He becomes aware that there is no rescue, neither for him, nor for Julia.
However, when the imprisonment begins, Winston still firmly believes that the Party cannot
get inside him and make him betray Julia.
Winstons imprisonment can be divided into three parts: interrogation, mental
treatment and Room 101. This section will shortly present how every stage of his captivity
affects his mind and personality, and how it leads to his final defeat.
3.3.1
Interrogation
Winston spends the first part of his imprisonment in a high-ceilinged windowless cell
with walls of glittering white porcelain (Orwell 237). He is under constant observation of the
telescreen; he cannot move, sleep or eat. He has no sense of time and place. Tired, anxious
and completely disoriented, Winston can only helplessly observe how other prisoners are
taken to Room 101 and wonder what will happen to him. The increasing tension is finally
released when OBrien comes in and introduces himself as one of torturers Winstons only
remaining hope, the man, who he thought was a friend, turns out to be the greatest traitor of
them all. The failure of his resistance becomes obvious. After that, he undergoes a severe
series of physical torture, which makes him confess whatever the Party wants.
The first part of Winstons imprisonment affects him in two different ways. Firstly,
cunningly deceived and suddenly secluded from the familiar surroundings where he built up
his timid belief in the possibility of the resistance, he becomes more and more uncertain of his
Pecka 35
own individual strength (Fukuhara 26); and the bigger his uncertainty, the more susceptible to
brainwashing he becomes. Secondly, severe physical torture that he experiences manages to
destroy his sense of dignity. Taylor notes that physical abuse, which usually is an integral part
of the process of brainwashing, has an undoubted psychological impact on the victim (91).
Thus, the series of tortures affects Winston psychologically. The inseparability between
physical and psychological abuse becomes especially clear when, later on, Winstons mirror
reflection makes him realize that he, the Last Man, no longer resembles a human being
(Orwell 283-284). It is the moment when he realizes that the Party has already changed him
and that the person he used to be is lost irretrievably.
3.3.2
Mental treatment
You know perfectly well what is the matter with you. You have known
it for years, though you have fought against the knowledge. You are mentally
deranged. You suffer from a defective memory. You are unable to remember
real events, and you persuade yourself that you remember other events which
never happened. Fortunately it is curable. You have never cured yourself of it,
because you did not choose to. There was a small effort of the will that you
were not ready to make. Even now, I am well aware, you are clinging to your
disease under the impression that it is a virtue. (Orwell 258)
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Pecka 37
himself. There was no idea that he had ever had, or could have, that OBrien had not long ago
known, examined and rejected. His mind contained Winstons mind (Orwell 268). As Phelan
notes: Winston subconsciously recognizes the very idea of Big Brother the loving, caring,
understanding, fair but fearful and ruthless father in the character of OBrien (107). The
relation between those two resembles the relation between a teacher and a student, a father
and a child, or a doctor and a patient: in the face of OBriens greatness, Winston is well
aware of his own insignificance and feels obliged to obey him. According to Taylor, authority
may become an effective tool for brainwashing as long as it is fully accepted by the victim
(80). And since Winston accepts OBriens supremacy, the idea of authority greatly affects
him.
However, although Winston obeys OBriens instructions and starts successively
applying doublethink techniques to his own thinking, he still is, deep inside, certain that his
inner mind is inviolate. He still dreams about dying as an enemy of the Party; To die hating
them, that was freedom, he dares to think (Orwell 294).
3.3.3
Room 101
Before OBrien takes Winston to Room 101, he gives him a diagnosis: Intellectually
there is very little wrong with you. It is only emotionally that you have failed to make
progress (Orwell 295). Thus, in Room 101, it is Winstons emotions that are aimed at.
One of the most influential emotions of all is, of course, fear. Extreme personal fright,
which often is the source of ones phobias, can develop a serious, mind-changing trauma. In
other words, such a trauma, if well-used, can become another sufficient way to greatly
influence ones mind. OBrien tells Winston that for everyone there is something
unendurable something that cannot be contemplated (Orwell 297). And indeed, although
Winston does not know what OBrien requires him to do, while exposed to his personal
Pecka 38
phobia of being eaten by rats, he does exactly what the Party wants him to do he betrays
Julia, at the same time betraying his own, inner and to that point inviolate sphere of his mind.
The experience in Room 101 becomes a deep trauma for Winston, and it not only
effectively kills all his personal affections but also ultimately changes his personality. As
Taylor notes, although in brainwashing the command of act comes from the outside, the
effectively brainwashed person will be convinced that the change occurs inside (98). And
indeed, in the end of the novel, Winston is able to win the victory over himself: he really
starts loving Big Brother (Orwell 311). It is no longer a command or a duty, it is his own
feeling.
To sum up, the process of brainwashing depicted in Nineteen Eighty-Four uses such
influential techniques against the individual as: physical pain (which destroys ones dignity
and weakens morals), isolation (which deepens the sense of uncertainty), submission to
authority (which makes it easier for the individual to accept that the change of his beliefs is
indeed needed), sanity (which helps convince that the brainwashing is something beneficial
for the victim) and personal phobia (which can developed a powerful trauma). Therefore,
Winstons story of conversion is, as Phelan puts it, not just an exemplary case of what
happens when the individual rebels against the totalitarian state but also an account of how
the Party responds to one of its last apparently serious threats (103). In other words, it proves
that the Party is successful in performing brainwashing both on mass and individual scale.
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CONCLUSION
Brainwashing is a notion that indicates the use of control in order to exercise (usually
with use of force) the power of the person that performs the act. Taylor notes that it is very
much a social event, requiring both an agent and a victim (92). Thus, brainwashing works
most effectively in social environments where the ruling class or system wants to repress the
individuality and freedom of lower classes by making human puppets out of citizens.
Brainwashing can be applied to the masses and to an individual; in both cases it requires
social interaction: between the government and citizens, or between a torturer and a victim.
In George Orwells Nineteen Eighty-Four the craft of thought control is used as the
main tool for maintaining absolute control over citizens of the totalitarian state. In fact,
George Orwell introduces us to the political system where the government fully succeeds in
controlling every aspect of human life from peoples behaviours trough views and beliefs to
their thoughts and emotions. In Oceania, brainwashing as a social and psychological process
works on two levels collective: where it affects the whole society; and individual: where it
affects a thought criminals identity and mind alone.
Collectively, brainwashing is attained thanks to well-maintained political system. All
policies and main goals of the Party are subordinated to the totalitarian dream of absolute
control. The whole ideology of Ingsoc is fuelled with the ultimate desire to achieve ceaseless
power. Propaganda, surveillance and all other methods and techniques of manipulation
performed on Oceanic citizens are strictly connected with the act of brainwashing, and they
all fall into Liftons eight totalist themes. Although on the surface most of those methods
seem to be targeted only on peoples behaviours, their main and most crucial goal is to change
peoples brains. The Party knows that if they succeed in controlling peoples thoughts and
emotions, suitable behaviour and obedience will naturally follow.
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Pecka 41
WORKS CITED
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Dwan, David. Truth and Freedom in Orwells Nineteen Eighty-Four. Philosophy and
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Meyers, Jeffrey. An Autobiographical Strain. A Readers Guide to G. Orwell. London:
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Meyers, Jeffrey. The Genesis of 1984. A Readers Guide to G. Orwell. London: Thames
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Phelan, James. Character, Progression, and Thematism in 1984. George Orwell:
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Taylor, Kathleen. Brainwashing: the Science Of Thought Control. Oxford: Oxford University
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READING LIST
Huxley, Aldous. Brave New World. New York: The Modern Library, 1946. Print.
Ishiguro, Kazuo. Never Let Me Go. London: Faber and Faber, 2005. Print.
Black, Shameem. Ishiguros Inhuman Aesthetics. Modern Fiction Studies, 55.4 (2009):
785-807. Web. <http://muse.jhu.edu/>
Buchanan, Brad. Oedipus in Dystopia: Freud and Lawrence in Aldous Huxleys Brave New
World.
Journal
of
Modern
Literature,
25.3-4
(2002):
79-89.
Web.
<http://muse.jhu.edu/>
Firchow, Peter. Science and Conscience in Huxleys Brave New World. Contemporary
Literature, 16.3 (1975): 301-316. Web. <http://www.jstor.org/>
Hyvarinen, Matti. Friendship, Care, and Politics: Kazuo Ishiguros Never Let Me Go.
Redescriptions: Yearbook of Political Thought, Conceptual History and Feminist
Theory, 12 (2008): 202-223. Web.
<http://www.jyu.fi/yhtfil/redescriptions/articles_2008.htm>
Puchner, Martin. When We Were Clones. Raritan Review XXII (2008): 34-49. Web.
<http://www.people.fas.harvard.edu/~puchner/essays.html>