Hardcover, 312 pages

Spanish language

Published Aug. 9, 1977 by Ediciones Destino.

ISBN:
978-84-233-0425-7
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OCLC Number:
4047702

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5 stars (3 reviews)

Depicts life in a totalitarian regime in the year of 1984.

143 editions

Super dystopia, depressive and triggers, too realized in real life!

4 stars

1984 by Orwell isn't your typical feel-good, hopeful sci-fi novel. It is a dystopian, cautionary tale, that sadly has even more relevance now in 2018 than when it was first published, and this thought is scary.

Its main protagonist is Winston Smith. He works for the Ministry of Truth, London, chief city of Airstrip one, Oceania. During the 1960's, the world had gone through revolutions, and now it is divided into 3 super-continents, at constant war with one another. Every person is monitored and listened to by the over-powerful Big Brother, when every act and even its mere thought are crimes, punished in the most horrible, brual and sadisitic ways imaginable.

The novel portrays a totalitarian future (for the author), where every person and every thing in the world is monitored, catalogued, created, and un-created in a tyranical regime enslaving everyone. Language is re-shaped, history is written and re-written over …

reviewed 1984: a novel by George Orwell (Signet Classics)

Horrifyingly Excellent

5 stars

Absolutely excellent book, a must read for everyone in my opinion. It does get a little dry at certain parts, but picks right back up. It is entirely worth pushing through.

The book expresses an insanely scary, yet completely plausible future of the world, or more likely certain places. Some places around the world share many similar core values with the world of 1984, which furthermore helps strengthen the fearful possibility. 1984 is a great fusion of non-fiction, history, futurism, and fiction in a dystopian world ruled by people who quite literally want nothing more than power, pure, unadulterated power. They will do anything to get it, and do anything to keep it. This is all done in a fictional world, but sometimes it really feels like you're reading non-fiction, due to how completely possible the world created is. Many values shown in the book, you hear and see about …

reviewed Nineteen Eighty-Four by George Orwell (The Complete works of George Orwell -- v. 1)

Review of 'Nineteen Eighty-Four' on 'Goodreads'

5 stars

The contributions of this book are far too grand for me to go into all details here. To make it short, I believe that Orwell provided a fitting explanation of how individual thought is suppressed under totalitarian regimes. The principles of doublethink are also used in democratic states whenever it is politically necessary to hold two conflicting opinions. I even claim that it is a politician's most essential skill to perform this mental gymnastics convincingly.

However, this propaganda does not necesarrily manage to convince everybody. Regardless of the political system, it seems that generally, the people under its influence tend to root for it. But also regardless of the system, the capacity for subversive ideas can never be eliminated. Whether this capacity is actually of any use, though, depends on the system. The dystopian world of 1984 deals with subversive thoughts in such an efficient way, that revolutionary spirit is …

Subjects

  • Totalitarianism
  • Fiction