Minor Character
5. Thought Police
The gatherings of several people that working for Big Brother to oversee every member of the party. They are tapping into the wires of one's thoughts in the form of sounds. They observeby gestures, but they are spreading false rumours, marking and eliminating some people whose value can be dangerous in the Prole without influence them with the ideology of the Party.
6. Mrs. Person
The neighbor‘s wife who lives on the floor with Winston, she is thirty years old, but looks older than her age, she was dusty in the curves of her face and her hair tangled.
7. Person
He is Winston's neighbour who ends up in the Ministry of Love with Winston. He turns in by his own children. Although he has a fat body and the smell of sweat spreading from his body, but he has enterprise stupid with a lump of spirits, damp spots sprawling all over his pink face. He never critical, he fullsof the party beyond the mind police. When he was thirty five-year-old, he expelled from the Youth League, but before that he survived spying for a year beyond the provisions. In the ministry, he is placed in a lowly post that does not demand intelligence, but he is an important figure on the Sports Committee and all other committees that organized community hikes, spontaneous demonstrations, saving campaigns, and voluntary activities in general.
8. Syme
He is a philologist, a Newspeak expert, he works in the Research Department of Ministry of Truth. He has a small body,dark hair,and bushy eyes with a moody. He is mocking impassion, and intimidating while talking to another guy. He works a large team member composed of experts to compose a Newspeak Dictionary Eleventh Print. He has a deep thought, yet overly intelligent orthodoxy with clear views and a clear talk.
9. Katharine
The wife of Winston, she is the tall woman with bright hair, she has elegant gestures. A challenging face, gaunt like a noble or a noble. According to Winston, his wife is a stupid, very vulgar and empty woman. He thinks that her mind full of slogans, ―No party is not believed by her‖.
10. The Prole
On the value of a low-ranking camp like the party's easy-to-rule animals, the proles majority does not have telescreen at home.
All matters of morality, they are allowed to follow the inheritance of their ancestors, crimes, criminals of thieves, thieves, prostitutes, drug criminals, and all kinds of swindlers left to the prole. Even they have free sex running without punishment, divorce allowed, but they have to still continue to work and their other activities are not important and should not be suspected. As in the slogan the Party says: "The Prole and the animals are free". The only public event that the prole is paying attention to is the Lottery with the big draws are drawn every week organized by the Ministry of Plenty with a number of small wins actually paid to them.
11. Mr. Charrington
He is the owner of the shop where is Winston rents the room, he is sixty years old, weak and bent, he has put and pleasant nose. The gentle eyes gilded with his thick glasses. His hair almost white, but his eyebrows is thick and still black, gentle and delicate movements. He has gentle sounds fade away with an accent above the proles. He uses an out-dated jacket of black velvet seemed intellectually like a poet or a musician, but in the end of the story, he becomes a member of the Thought Police.
12. Ampleforth
He is a poet-of-sorts who works with Winston in the Ministry of Truth and also winds up in the Ministry of Love. He has the makings of playing with rhyme and the number of syllables (poets). He works in the making of versions of poems that are twisted or referred to as definitive texts, the text is ideologically unpleasant, but for some reason its existence is retained by the Party in various anthologies of poetry.
b. Plot
There are five stages of plot, a typical plot structure includes exposition, rising action, climax, falling action, and denouncement or resolution.
1. Exposition
The beginning act in 1984 nove is when the author introduce the character in this novel. It was a bright cold day in April, and the clocks were strik ing thirteen. Winston Smith, his chin nuzzled into hisbreast in an effort to escape the vile wind, slipped quicklythroughthe glass doors of Victory Mansions, though notquickly enough to prevent a swirl of gritty dust from entering along with him (Orwell, 1961)
2. Rising Action
In this case, the beginning of conflics are appeared. It shows from the quote above:
His pen had slid voluptuously over the smooth paper, printing in large neat capitals
over and over again, filling half a page (Oorwell, 1961: 23)
3. Climax
The climax in this story is when Winston and Julia are lying in the badroom of charrington‘s house. That‘s statement shows from quote in 1984 novel follow:
He released Winston with a little push toward the guards. This quote describes the climax in the novel. When the guards and O‘Brien bring Winston to the room 101, Winston really nervous and scare. In room 101, Winston begins to feel poor to his selft, he starts to say the all his known to Party such as his secret, Julia, his activities and etc. although O‘Brien not ask him.
4. Falling Action
It was in the Park, on a vile, biting day in March, when the earth was like iron and all the grass seemed dead and there was not a bud anywhere except a few crocuses which had pushed themselves up to be dismembered by the wind. He was hurrying along with frozen hands and watering eyes when he saw her not ten meters away from him. It struck him at once that she had changed in some ill-defined way. They almost passed one another without a sign: then he turned and followed her, not very eagerly (Orwell, 1961:291) From the quote above, it shows that Winston being orthodoxy and pure think at all. Now, he fills his life with no sense. He is doing the all party‘s rule and trying to life better without dream, power, and apposite thinking.
5. Denouncement or Resolution
The resolution from this novel is the end of story. As the main character Winston being free man, after he experiences tortue, he feels nothing, no interest,
no critic, no think, no love, no emotions and no crime. And finally, he loves Big Brother. But it was all right, everything was all right, the struggle was finished. He had won the victory over himself. He loved Big Brother (Orwell, 1961: 376)
c. Setting
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