Essay Topic Hub

1984
Essays

2,727+ paper examples, study guides & outlines

2,727 papers
1 subject area
UG & Grad levels
Free to browse
About This Topic

George Orwell's 1984 is one of the most frequently studied novels in literature courses at the secondary and undergraduate level. The novel presents a totalitarian society ruled by the Party and watched over by the figure of Big Brother, making it a rich text for exploring themes of power, government control, and the manipulation of truth. Its sustained relevance to political science, philosophy, and cultural studies means students encounter it across disciplines, not only in English courses. The novel's depictions of surveillance, propaganda, and the suppression of individual thought give it an analytical depth that rewards close reading and theoretical engagement.

The archived papers on this topic reflect several distinct approaches. Some focus on historical context, situating Orwell's vision within the political climate that shaped the novel's composition. Others pursue thematic analysis, with particular attention to the mutability of history and how the Party uses control over the past to consolidate power in the present. A number of papers engage more broadly with Orwell's ideas about society and government, offering reflective or critical responses to the novel's central arguments.

A strong essay on 1984 requires a focused thesis that moves beyond plot summary toward an argument about how the novel's mechanisms of power operate and what they reveal. Textual evidence drawn directly from Orwell's language and narrative choices carries the most analytical weight. One common pitfall is treating the novel's themes as self-evident rather than demonstrating them through careful close reading and specific examples.

2,727 papers
Sort by:
Research Paper Doctorate
Reason Mind Body the Philosophers
The philosophers of ancient Greece were the first western thinkers to develop the notion of reason, and specifically, to investigate how far reason can take human beings in their search for understanding of the world…
Research Paper Doctorate
Female sex offenders: characteristics and criminal behavior
There have been extensive studies regarding child sexual abuse, however, there have been minimal attention paid to sexual abuse by females (Denov 2001). During the last twenty years there has been a rise of interest in…
Research Paper Doctorate
Criminal policy and drug court effectiveness
Drug Courts: A Program to Reinvent Justice for Addicts
Paper Undergraduate
Harley Davidson Strategic Management -- Harley Davidson
This work examines the strategic management of Harley Davidson Company and seeks to answer specific questions relating to this company's management through conduction of a Porter's Five Forces analysis and a review of…
Paper High School
Poe Poem and Drink Edgar
A descriptive essay on Edgar Allan Poe's "The Raven." In the essay, it is explained how the theme of the loss of a beautiful woman and insanity can be found in other Poe works such as "Annabel Lee" and "Ligeia" and "The Tell-Tale Heart." Additionally, it is argued that if Poe was a beverage, he would be absinthe due to the maddening effects often attributed to the drink.
Research Paper Doctorate
Adolescence and personality development
Adolescence is the period of human development and growth characterized by susceptibility to social and psychological pressures. This period is a formative and crucial part of the development of the adult personality…
Research Paper Doctorate
Ethical Dilemmas in Counseling
Ethical Dilemmas in High School Counseling
Paper Undergraduate
How the universe was created
It is fascinating to note that creation narratives from all over the world possess certain commonalties. They almost all precede from the core point of one deity who stirred Himself to create a world and who involved humans in creation of that world. Another striking commonality is that all have creation emanating from their perspective as though they were the sole country in the world and the world was created for them. To illustrate this point, the essay takes five different narrative accounts – Hopi, Japanese, Hebrew, Indian, and Chinese – and compares and contrasts their similarities and differences. In each, creation culminated in forming that particular nation. In the Hebrew account, the narrative focuses around a mystical land called Garden of Eden; creation ended in forming the Hopis; the deities created Japan; the Indian god created animals (Bulls, cows etc. most primary to the Indian people) and most famously eh Ganges; whilst the Chinese tale also has symbols of China (specifically the turtle). For people in those days, the world was their country. It was all they knew. Creation myths, therefore, centered on their nation.
Research Paper Doctorate
Slang Term for Psychoanalysis in Popular Culture
¶ … slang term for psychoanalysis in popular culture is 'talk therapy.' This is because the first forms of psychoanalytic discourse, as developed by Sigmund Freud, relied upon a release of verbal free associations on…
Thesis Masters
Reaganomics or Voodoo Economics Helped Spur Economic
Reaganomics or voodoo economics helped spur economic growth in America after the Great Depression. The writer's contention that the national debt grew from 907 billion in 1980 to 2.6 trillion in 1988 under Reagan's…