Chapter 4
by testsuphomeAdminIn Chapter 4 of 1984, Winston Smith starts his workday at the Ministry of Truth, feeling a sense of resignation as he approaches the speakwrite—a device used to record his changes to documents. The cubicle he works in is equipped with various pneumatic tubes, used for communication and waste disposal. Among these is the “memory hole,” a mechanism for destroying documents that are deemed unnecessary, leading to their eventual incineration in large furnaces. Winston retrieves several slips of paper, each requiring his intervention. Three are straightforward requests, while the fourth is more complicated, prompting him to set it aside for later attention. His daily tasks involve altering reality itself, erasing any traces of inconvenient truths to uphold the Party’s narrative.
To begin his work, Winston uses the telescreen to call up past issues of The Times, which are quickly delivered to him. His job entails rewriting articles to reflect the Party’s current stance and erasing anything that contradicts its propaganda. For example, he is tasked with correcting Big Brother’s earlier incorrect predictions about military engagements, aligning them with the Party’s present narrative. This ongoing manipulation of history is central to Winston’s work, where the truth is perpetually altered to maintain the Party’s control over its citizens. Every day, he is immersed in the task of reshaping reality, making the past conform to the present Party line, and thereby erasing the possibility of dissent.
After he completes his revisions, Winston disposes of the original documents in the memory hole, fully aware that they will be destroyed, leaving no trace of their existence. This process is a key feature of the Party’s totalitarian control: history is continuously rewritten to ensure that nothing contradicts the Party’s narrative. It creates a society where the truth is not just hidden but actively manipulated, and where evidence of past realities is eradicated. The constant alteration of facts and figures ensures that the Party’s version of events becomes the only one that is ever remembered, while the true history of the world is obliterated. Through this systematic erasure, the Party secures its power, eliminating any record that might challenge its authority or expose its lies.
As Winston observes the other workers in the Records Department, he notices that many are engaged in similar work, fabricating truth by erasing “unpersons”—individuals who have been vaporized or erased from history by the Party. This practice further reinforces the Party’s control, as it not only alters documents but erases entire lives from existence. Winston reflects on the absurdity of the statistics and stories he manipulates, aware of the vast disconnect between the fabricated narratives he is required to create and the reality of life outside the Ministry. The Party’s manipulation of facts creates a world where even basic truths become subjective, easily distorted to fit the needs of those in power. Winston’s own growing realization of this absurdity underscores the oppressive atmosphere in which he works, where every truth is fluid and every fact subject to the Party’s whim.
While working on a more complex task, Winston is instructed to rewrite a report concerning Big Brother’s Order for the Day, which mistakenly identifies a comrade who has since been erased from history. In a creative act of forgery, Winston invents a new hero—Comrade Ogilvy—a person who had never existed but whose fabricated history aligns perfectly with the Party’s ideals. Through this act of creation, Winston illustrates how easily the Party can fabricate heroes and villains, shaping history to its needs at any given moment. His ability to create a historical figure out of thin air highlights the malleability of truth in a totalitarian state, where even the past is subject to revision. This manipulation of reality, where individuals and events can be invented or erased at will, reveals the terrifying power the Party holds over not just the present but the very concept of truth itself. In the end, Winston reflects on his role in this process, wondering about the true nature of existence under Big Brother’s rule, where nothing can be trusted, and reality is what the Party says it is.
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