Junior spies are youth that act as spies for the party monitoring adults for any disloyalty towards the part. The kind of power they hold is just crazy. I was quite surprised by this. I understood that there were junior spies but the fact that they are so outwardly opinionated, especially at their young age, is crazy. When you normally think of spies, you would think of some man in a suit with glasses sneaking around collecting info. However, these kids are a whole other story. When realizing just how much power these kids hold, the power that the party has over the people seems that much more dangerous. Is it right to use kids in this manner?
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"'They're disappointed because they couldn't go see the hanging, that's what it is'...'Why can't we go and see the hanging?' roared the boy in his huge voice." (23)
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"Withers, however, was already an unperson. He did not exist: he had never existed." (46)
The last disturbing quote that I came across in these chapters had to do with Winston's work. The word "unperson" is used to signify that someone is dead. And during his job, he was trying to figure out why Withers had been disgraces. The only clues he found were the words "refs unpersons". He believes that this means the Withers is dead.
When looking at the paragraphs covering this topic, I am starting to see more and more that Oceania and the whole of this 1984 world is a true dystopia. The system has developed to a point where people who oppose it can be made to disappear. This classifies them as "unpersons" implying that they are most likely dead. When you see the letters "un" before a word, you can predict that the whole world is a negative to something. This is demonstrated by the word "unperson" because once a person is labeled this, they are nothing. They "did not exist" and "had never existed".
An interesting link I see between your first two quotes is that of how the power of the children is presented. You discuss how the children are opinionated and dangerous, and in the second quote the boy is described as having a "huge voice." I think that the use of "huge" could relate to the respective power Winston and Young Parsons hold. That the volume, the hugeness, shows the child to have the upper hand on the more experienced.
ReplyDeleteI agree with you Bemi, some of the lines throughout the story are quite disturbing. It's weird to know that in their type of world all of these things are normal for them and they don't really see any problems with it. I would have never imagined a kid having so much power.
ReplyDeleteI had the same reaction as you Bemi; when the children held so much power it surprised me. I did not expect the children to back-stab their parents and turn them in like spies of the party. I concur with the fact that that children are powerful tools that the party use to their advantage.
ReplyDeleteI agree with you Bemister because I had also chosen the first quote. I didn't expect the kids to be so crucial over not going to see the hanging.
ReplyDeleteI agree on how surprising it is that a young kid is appointed to be a spy. It is as if they are catering the next generation of officers to take control.
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