This research paper aims to examine, explore and analyse the role of digital technology that works solely in favour of the state and further leads to complete social control in George Orwell’s masterpiece, 1984. Orwell’s novel serves as a stark warning against the threats posed by a totalitarian regime that seeks to create a society devoid of privacy, individuality, and truth. Such an authoritarian regime employs mechanisms that are utilised by the Party. The extensive use of technical devices, including telescreens, hidden microphones, the Thought Police, and the linguistic manipulation of Newspeak, helps achieve the desired goals of the state. The psychological impacts of these control mechanisms, especially the digital ones, on the masses are examined, further demonstrating the insightful effects of constant observation and propaganda on human behaviour, thought and action. This study aims to explore how Orwell’s Oceania has moved from the pages to the present time, emphasising the frightening similarities in how modern states worldwide handle data privacy and public information. Using examples from modern technology and politics, this study emphasises the enduring relevance of Orwell’s warnings in the age of science. By reassessing Orwell’s warnings, the present study will focus on the urgent need to defend democratic ideals and individual independence against the escalating surge of state and digital monitoring.
Deepak Raj (Thu,) studied this question.