1984 Study Guide Questions
Book
One, Chapters 1-2
- What bothers
Winston?
- What is wrong
with his society?
- What are the
three slogans of the Inner Party?
- What are the four
ministries?
- What items are
written in italics?
- How does the Two
Minute Hate work?
- What happens to
Winston during the chant?
- What happens
between O’Brien and Winston?
- During the film
(p. 11), how did the audience react?
- What is
"thoughtcrime"?
- What are the
Thought Police?
- Who are the
Parsons and what do they represent?
- How do the
Parsons’ children behave?
- What is Winston's
dream about O’Brien?
- What is announced
on the news? (p. 25)
Book One, Chapters 3-4
- What is Winston’s
dream about his mother? How does he feel about himself in that dream?
- What is his dream
about the "Golden Country"?
- What does he
remember about the big events of the past? Bombs? Past Wars?
- Explain the Party
slogan, "Who controls the past controls the future; who controls the
present controls the past."
- What does he know
about the legends concerning Big Brother?
- Describe
Winston’s job.
- How is the past
controlled?
- What special
literature, music, and entertainment is produced for the proletariat
(Proles)?
- How does Winston
feel about his work? What sort of "creativity" is involved?
- What is the
significance of Comrade Ogilvy?
Book One, Chapters 5-7
- What is the
problem with obtaining razor blades?
- What is revealed
about Inner Party philosophy in the discussion between Winston and Syme?
- Why does Winston
feel that Syme will be vaporized?
- Parsons brags
about his children for doing what?
- What is the
significance of the telescreen announcement? (p. 51)
- What are
Winston’s feelings about the present time after he hears the cheerful
announcement on the telescreen?
- Winston predicts
that certain people will be vaporized and that certain people will never
be vaporized. Who? Why?
- What is the
purpose of marriage in the state?
- What do Winston’s
memories about visiting a prostitute reveal about his attitudes towards
sex in Oceania?
- How does Winston
view the Proles?
- How are the
Proles controlled?
- What
lies/half-truths does the Party teach about history?
- Winston suspects
that the Party lies about progress made since the war. What Party claims
does he doubt?
- What is the story
of Aaronson, Jones and Rutherford?
- Why is this story
so meaningful for Winston?
- What is Winston’s
unanswered question?
Book One, Chapter 8
- Why does Winston
go off on his own? What activities is he missing out on?
- What is life like
in the Proles’ end of London?
- What does Winston
think about after his conversation with the old man in the pub?
- What does Winston
discover at Mr. Charrington’s shop?
- What is Mr.
Charrington like?
- What does Winston
think when he sees the dark-haired girl outside Mr. Charrington’s shop?
- How does one’s
own body betray a person?
- Why does Winston
wonder about church bells ringing in London?
Book Two, Chapter 1
- How does Winston
react to the note from Julia before he reads it?
- How does Winston
react to the note after he reads it?
- How do they
manage to meet?
- Describe the
"parade" in Victory Square. Why does the Inner Party provide the
spectacle for the Proles? For the Outer Party members?
Book Two, Chapter 2
- Why is Winston
ill at ease once he is alone with Julia?
- What does Julia
bring with her that she has obtained on the black market?
- What is Julia’s
philosophy? (More about his in chapter 3)
- What familiar
sign does Winston find?
- What is the
significance of the thrush music?
- What does Winston
mean when he says that he loves Julia all the more because she has had
scores of sexual encounters?
- Compare/contrast
this to the situation in a related novel, Brave New World by Aldous
Huxley.
Book Two, Chapter 3
- How and where do
Julia and Winston meet?
- What is Julia’s
job?
- What is her
background?
- What is her
attitude toward the Inner Party?
- Describe
Winston’s marriage.
- What do Winston
and Julia disagree about?
Book Two, Chapter 4
- How does Winston
react to the singing Prole woman?
- What pleasures of
the senses are mentioned in this chapter? What is Orwell’s point in mentioning
them? (Also, notice the difference between the dystopian society in Brave
New World and that in 1984 regarding gratification of the senses.)
- What is Winston’s
reaction to rats? Julia’s reaction?
- Winston is
interested in the church bells that once played in the city even though he
is not religious. What do church bells mean to him?
- Winston sees the
coral paperweight as a symbol of what?
Book Two, Chapter 5-6
- Who has vanished?
- Describe the
preparations for Hate Week. In what ways does the Inner Party excel in
building spirit?
- Julia and Winston
have some differences. Explain them.
- What finally
convinces Winston that O’Brien is a member of the Brotherhood?
Book Two, Chapter 7
- What does Winston
remember about his family and his relationship with his mother?
- What does Winston
realize about love and loyalty as a result of his dream?
- What is the
difference between confession and betrayal? PAY CLOSE ATTENTION TO THIS!!!
Book Two, Chapter 8—9
(through p. 151)
- Contrast
the living quarters and style of the Inner Party members with those of the
Outer Party members and Proles.
- How does
O’Brien test Julia and Winston?
- What
information does O’Brien give them about the Brotherhood?
- How will
O’Brien get The Book to Winston?
- What are
the ways in which the Inner Party builds spirit during Hate Week?
Book Two, Chapter 9,
The Book (p. 151-164)
- Why does Orwell
include detailed passages from Goldstein’s Book in 1984?
- Notice that
Orwell repeats the first paragraph of The Book on p. 152 and p. 166. Why
would Orwell repeat himself in that way? What is the purpose?
- What three
classes of people have always existed? (p. 152)
- In what ways have
these three classes changed? (p. 152)
- What is the
purpose of war in the world of 1984?
- What are the two
aims of the Party?
- What are the two
problems with which the Party is concerned?
- Why do all three
superpowers forbid their citizens from associating with foreigners?
- The governments
of the three superpowers are alike in essence even though their forms of
government have different names. Identify these similarities and explain
why they exist?
- What is the real
"war" (p. 164) fought in each of the three governments? Your
answer will explain the party slogan, "War is Peace."
- What are the aims
of the three groups? (p. 166-167)
- What changes in
the pattern occurred in the nineteenth century?
- How did socialism
change in the twentieth century?
- Why are the
rulers in the twentieth century better at maintaining power than earlier
tyrants?
- What are the four
ways an elite group falls from power? (p. 170-171)
- How does the
Inner Party make certain it will not fall from power? (p. 171-172)
- How is a person’s
class determined in the 1984 world?
- What is
doublethink and what is its purpose to the ruling class?
- Why is the
mutability of the past important to the ruling class?
- Why will this
ruling class live on while earlier tyrants fell?
- What other
significant points do you notice?
Book Two, Chapter 10
- What
understanding does Winston gain about the common people?
- What is
the significance of the glass paperweight here?
Book Three, Chapter 1
- Where is Winston?
How is he treated there and why?
- Which of
Winston’s acquaintances is in the same place and why?
- What happens
between the starving man and the chinless man?
- What effect to
the words "Room 101" have on the skull-faced man?
- Who truly is
O’Brien? What do he and Charrington have in common?
Book Three, Chapter 2
- What sort
of treatment does Winston receive on p. 198-200?
- What is
O’Brien attempting to teach Winston? (p.201-207)
- On p.
209—211, O’Brien explains how the Inner Party avoids the mistakes of past
totalitarian governments. State in your own words what O’Brien means.
- What
effect does the (painless) shock treatment have on Winston? (p. 212-213)
- What
questions does Winston ask O’Brien and what are the responses?
Book Three, Chapter 3
- According
to O’Brien, what are the three stages in Winston’s re-integration, and
which stage is he about to enter?
- Who wrote
Goldstein’s book? Is what the book says true? (Notice the answer in its
entirety, p. 215-216)
- Why does
the Inner Party seek power and how does this reason differ from the
reasons of the Soviet Communists under Stalin and the Nazis?
- Explain
the slogan, "Freedom is Slavery."
- How does
one person assert their power over another?
- How will
Oceania differ from all traditional utopias? (p. 220)
- Why does
Winston feel he is morally superior to O’Brien and how does O’Brien prove
that Winston is wrong?
- How does
Winston’s physical appearance affect him?
- What good
thing can Winston say about himself at the end of this chapter?
- How does
Winston feel about O’Brien? Why?
- What final
question does Winston ask O’Brien? (p. 225-226)
- How is the
Inner Party’s philosophy different from the Controller Mond’s philosophy
in Brave New World?
Book Three, Chapter 4
- How has Winston’s
environment changed? What does he do with his time? How does he show his
obedience to the Inner Party?
- How does Winston
show that he is not entirely true to Big Brother?
- How does Winston
feel about Big Brother?
Book Three, Chapter 5
- What happens in
Room 101 and how does this "cure" Winston?
Book Three, Chapter 6
- What is the
setting?
- What is Winston’s
job? (Look up "sinecure" if you don’t know it)
- How did his
meeting with Julia go?
- How is it evident
that Winston really is a different person?
- What is happening
in the last two paragraphs of the book?