In George Orwell's "Nineteen Eighty-Four," the Proles or proletariat were the working class of Oceania. The Proles were under educated, poor and lived in abject poverty. If there was one positive to their existence, it was the fact that they were outside the realm of Party surveillance and had more privacy than both the Inner and well as Outer parties.
In George Orwell's book, Nineteen Eighty-Four, the proles were the working class people in Oceania. They did all the manual labor jobs and lived in poverty. The word proles comes from the Latin word, proletariat.
The proles are described as 'free people' and animals. They represent the majority of the population in Oceania. The name proles comes from the word 'proletariat' which represents the workers class in Communist Societies.
"Prole" is short for Proletariat. In Nineteen Eighty-Four, the proles are the section of society that are unaware of the dystopian elements of their world. They are distracted by simple, unimportant matters such as the lottery, and are more concerned with emotions as opposed to politics. They make up 85% of the population within Nineteen Eighty-Four, and could potentially overthrow Big Brother. Winston believes this will happen one day, when they wake up to their situation and take action.
W.Smith looks down upon the Proles and yet he also hopes that they will realize their power by overthrowing the government through revolution and , by so doing , create a better government .
The common people; the poor people that make up 85% of the society. They are largley unchanged by Ingsoc and lead a monotonous life; Winston sees them as the only hope to overthrow the Party.
It all depends on which perspective you want to look at. George Orwell was writing about a view of the governments of the future. If you read the book with that in mind you will find the government (IE Big Brother) on every page of the book as one of the main characters. Winston even makes the observation after they had caught him that they had been watching him all the time:- They had photos of him with Julia even when they thought they were alone in the forest outside of the city; they had his diary notes even though he had hidden it outside of the view of the telescreen; they had many pieces of information, notes, tape recordings, etc from his life that it appears they had been bugging him 24 hours a day for years. So if the book is about the government system and it is one of the main characters in the book, the government can be seen as the protagonist and Winston as the antagonist. On the flip side, since the book is chiefly written through Winston's eyes, it could be argued that he is the protagonist and the government the antagonist.
I love this book!
The book mary poppins comes back , the point of view for that book is Omnipotent:Because the narrator seems to know everything first point of view : its saying for plural and singular names + using as "we" "us" "I" etc.
in the book the outsiders by s. e. hinton, the point of view is 1st person, because ponyboy is the narrorator, and because you know his thoughts but not any of the other characters.
Third person, even though the book focuses more on Sabrina
It all depends on which perspective you want to look at. George Orwell was writing about a view of the governments of the future. If you read the book with that in mind you will find the government (IE Big Brother) on every page of the book as one of the main characters. Winston even makes the observation after they had caught him that they had been watching him all the time:- They had photos of him with Julia even when they thought they were alone in the forest outside of the city; they had his diary notes even though he had hidden it outside of the view of the telescreen; they had many pieces of information, notes, tape recordings, etc from his life that it appears they had been bugging him 24 hours a day for years. So if the book is about the government system and it is one of the main characters in the book, the government can be seen as the protagonist and Winston as the antagonist. On the flip side, since the book is chiefly written through Winston's eyes, it could be argued that he is the protagonist and the government the antagonist.
Down to Earth - 1984 A View from Above 1-6 was released on: USA: April 1984
The cast of A View from Cosmo - 1984 includes: Helen Gurley Brown as Herself - Host
Glacier View Wilderness was created in 1984.
Pine View High School was created in 1984.
1st point of view
Bella's point of view.
The point of view is Sita's.
First person point of view
The book A View From the Outside: Why Good Economics Works for Everyone was authored by P. Chidambaram.
Point of view is Third Person Narrator.
actually, she is making a book in point of view of Bella its called midnight sun!!!