Saturday 29 December 2012

The novel 1984, Winston secretly begins to write in the diary he is starting. Why isn't this action illegal? What consequences could it have, however?

Whensecretly
begins his diary, he thinks about the likely consequences of doing so (this is very early in
Chapter 1).

He knows that keeping a diary is not illegal.  The reason for
that is that there are no laws in Oceania so nothing is actually illegal.  The point of that is
that laws would require the government to follow them.  If there are no laws, the government can
do whatever it wants.

Even though keeping the diary is not illegal, Winston
knows that it will probably get him executed.  At the very least, he expects, he'll get
sentenced to 25 years at hard labor if he's caught.

No comments:

Post a Comment

To what degree were the U.S., Great Britain, Germany, the USSR, and Japan successful in regards to their efforts in economic mobilization during the...

This is an enormous question that can't really be answered fully in this small space. But a few generalizations can be made. Bo...