Love in 1984

[Part One of this essay can be found here.]
IN George Orwell’s famous novel 1984, the main character Winston Smith works for the Ministry of Truth, a colossal bureaucracy that disseminates lies. Smith is a bureaucrat playing a small part in the enormous task of editing and censoring published material in Oceania, one of three super-states, supposedly at war with each other but really working together, that comprise the globe. Oceania is ruled by the all-seeing dictator Big Brother.
Materials offensive to the Party are permanently deleted by Winston and his coworkers by being literally tossed down the “Memory Hole,” fed by a system of pneumatic tubes in the Ministry headquarters.
Winston first meets the main female character of the book in the hallways of the Ministry:
He did not know her name, but he knew that she worked in the Fiction Department. Presumably—since he had sometimes seen her with oily hands and carrying a spanner—she had some mechanical job on one of the novel-writing machines. She was a bold-looking girl, of about twenty-seven, with thick hair, a freckled face, and swift, athletic movements. A narrow scarlet sash, emblem of the Junior Anti-Sex League, was wound several times round the waist of her overalls, just tightly enough to bring out the shapeliness of her hips. Winston had disliked her from the very first moment of seeing her. He knew the reason. It was because of the atmosphere of hockey-fields and cold baths and community hikes and general clean-mindedness which she managed to carry about with her. He disliked nearly all women, and especially the young and pretty ones. It was always the women, and above all the young ones, who were the most bigoted adherents of the Party, the swallowers of slogans, the amateur spies and nosers-out of unorthodoxy.
Julia has noticed Winston and in time she surreptitiously passes him a note and requests a meeting. (more…)

