1984 Character List and Analysis

January 9, 2024

1984 characters list main

If you鈥檙e about to start reading , this article will introduce the main characters of George Orwell鈥檚 dystopian masterpiece. The main characters include Winston Smith, his lover Julia, and 翱鈥橞谤颈别苍, the Inner Party member who tortures Winston into betraying everything he loves. Minor characters include Mr. Charrington, a member of the Thought Police who rents a room to Winston, as well as Winston鈥檚 colleagues 鈥 Parsons, Ampleforth, and Syme. Continue on for our full 1984 character lists.

1984 Characters – Full Character List 

Winston Smith

The central character of George Orwell鈥檚 1984, Winston Smith works in the records department of the Ministry of Truth altering media to correspond with the Party鈥檚 ever-changing historical narrative. Winston is a low-level Party member who has begun to doubt the validity of state ideology. When the reader first encounters Winston, he has just begun keeping a diary. For an individual to trust his own thoughts instead of Party propaganda is an unpardonable offense. Though he knows it likely means his eventual imprisonment and torture, Winston longs for individual expression at odds with the omnipresent surveillance and authoritarian state violence.

Winston鈥檚 job gives him a privileged view of the historical machinations of the Party. As a worker in the Records Department, Winston sees firsthand how the Party endlessly changes the historical record to align with its current political goals. In the words of Big Brother, 鈥淲ho controls the past controls the future: who controls the present controls the past.鈥 Winston knows the Party lies 鈥 he has seen concrete evidence. In the face of the Party鈥檚 blatant lies, Winston struggles to reassert the authority of his own observations. Winston desperately wants his own experience of the external world to matter.

1984 Characters (Continued) 

Winston eventually meets and starts a relationship with Julia. As their feelings deepen, they see their relationship as a form of resistance against a Party that tries to eliminate love and sexual pleasure. Risking their lives, Winston rents a small room in the prole section of London for him and Julia to be alone. Winston and Julia differ in their belief in the possibility of revolution. Julia merely wants small acts of rebellion in their personal lives. She wants to carve out some small measure of happiness together. In marked contrast, Winston goes looking for 鈥淭he Brotherhood,鈥 a shadowy revolutionary organization. In spite of their efforts to keep their relationship secret, they are eventually found out, imprisoned, and tortured.

Until the very last chapter of the novel, Winston holds fast to the belief that though the Party might be able to make you confess to anything, they cannot change your fundamental beliefs. In other words, the Thought Police might be able to torture you, but they can鈥檛 alter what you fundamentally believe. This optimism is crushed when the Party turns Winston into an enthusiastic supporter of Big Brother. Winston鈥檚 fate is a cautionary example of the power of authoritarian violence on the individual.

Julia / The Dark-Haired Girl

Julia is the girl Winston meets and falls in love with. She works on one of the novel-writing machines in the fiction department. Winston notices her looking at him around the office and worries she鈥檚 a member of the Thought Police. After Winston鈥檚 second trip to Mr. Charrington鈥檚 shop, he sees her walking down the street. Terrified that he will be arrested, he returns home. Four days later, Winston sees her walking down the hallway at work. She trips and falls to the ground. Though Winston fears that she is a member of the thought police, he helps her to her feet nonetheless. As he helps her up, she slips a small piece of paper into his hand. Winston is shocked, but manages to keep his composure. Five minutes later, he surreptitiously glances at the piece of paper 鈥 on it is written 鈥淚 LOVE YOU.鈥

1984 Characters (Continued) 

Their relationship develops quickly. At first, they meet in out-of-the-way locations, but as their relationship deepens, Winston decides to rent a small room from Mr. Charrington where they can spend time. As Winston gets to know Julia, he discovers that she has no interest in any organized resistance to the Party. In contrast to Winston鈥檚 indignation, Julia finds the ideology of the Party laughable. On the one hand, Julia鈥檚 apathy leads her to disregard everything the Party says.

On the other hand, she has absolutely no interest in what is 鈥渞eally鈥 truthful. While Winston is appalled, he understands that this is what allows Julia to stay sane in the face of the violence and surveillance of the Party. Of these people, he thinks, 鈥淭hey simply swallowed everything, and what they swallowed did them no harm, because it left no residue behind, just as a grain of corn will pass undigested through the body of a bird.鈥

1984 Characters (Continued) 

Julia presents a different strategy of survival in Orwell鈥檚 dystopia. While Winston is obsessed with the existential and structural ramifications of the Party鈥檚 methods and ideology, Julia is interested in carving out some small space for individual feeling and pleasure. Winston jokes to Julia that she 鈥渋s only a rebel from the waist downwards.鈥 While this might be read as a critique, there is a logic to Julia鈥檚 strategy. In the face of the Party鈥檚 omnipotence, Julia focuses her energy on the love she has for Winston. When Winston thinks of the past, he thinks about the people鈥檚 loyalty to each other. He thinks, 鈥淭hey were governed by private loyalties which they did not question.鈥 Julia鈥檚 loyalty to Winston would seem to align with this ideal. I can鈥檛 help but wonder if they might have survived (at least a bit longer) if Winston hadn鈥檛 pursued organized resistance to the Party.

翱鈥橞谤颈别苍

[Spoiler alert] 翱鈥橞谤颈别苍 is the representative of state violence and authoritarianism in Orwell鈥檚 1984. Winston first encounters 翱鈥橞谤颈别苍 at one of the daily Two Minutes Hate in the records department. Winston feels immediately drawn to him. Something in 翱鈥橞谤颈别苍鈥檚 demeanor suggests to Winston 鈥渢hat [his] political orthodoxy was not perfect.鈥 At the end of the Two Minutes Hate, 翱鈥橞谤颈别苍 and Winston share a brief glance that makes Winston believe that 翱鈥橞谤颈别苍 hates the Party as well.

翱鈥橞谤颈别苍 had long had a special significance in Winston鈥檚 psyche. Winston believes that the voice of 翱鈥橞谤颈别苍 spoke to him seven years before in a dream. In this dream, 翱鈥橞谤颈别苍 says, 鈥淲e shall meet in the place where there is no darkness.鈥 Winston believes that the 鈥減lace where there is no darkness鈥 is positive. At the beginning of the novel, it represents, 鈥渢he imagined future, which one would never see, but which, by foreknowledge, one could mystically share in.鈥

1984 Characters (Continued) 

All this leads Winston to trust 翱鈥橞谤颈别苍 too much. When 翱鈥橞谤颈别苍 invites him to come by his house to ostensibly receive the newest version of the Newspeak dictionary, Winston believes that this is his entry into the Brotherhood. A few days later, Winston and Julia have been arrested and 翱鈥橞谤颈别苍 reveals himself as a member of the Thought Police. 翱鈥橞谤颈别苍 tortures Winston for weeks (months?) with the aim, not of confession, but of complete transformation. Ultimately, the 鈥減lace where there is no darkness鈥 turns out to be Winston鈥檚 prison cell.

1984 Character List – Minor Characters 

Mr. Charrington

When we first meet Mr. Charrington, he seems the mere owner of the junk shop where Winston buys his diary. By the end of the book, it is revealed that Mr. Charrington is a member of the Thought Police. Winston returns to Mr. Charrington鈥檚 shop and buys a piece of coral in glass that serves as a symbol of the idyllic past. Believing Mr. Charrington to be a harmless prole shopkeeper, Winston rents the room above the shop so that he can meet with Julia. While the room seems to have no telescreen, the Thought Police record everything Winston and Julia say in the room.

1984 Character List (Continued)

Parsons

Parsons is Winston鈥檚 neighbor. He lives across the hall with his wife and two children. An unthinking, fervent supporter of Big Brother, Parsons represents the enthusiastic ignorance of the rank-and-file Party members. Given Parsons鈥檚 support for the Party, Winston is shocked when they end up in the same holding cell in the Ministry of Love. It turns out that Parsons鈥檚 daughter supposedly heard him say 鈥淒own with Big Brother鈥 in his sleep and reported him. In the context of the novel, Parsons鈥檚 fate shows that even the most ardent defenders of an authoritarian regime are likely to be caught up in state surveillance.

Ampleforth

A 鈥渕ild, ineffectual, dreamy creature,鈥 Ampleforth works in the Records department with Winston. His job is to rewrite 鈥渋deologically offensive鈥 poems into 鈥渄efinitive versions鈥 for anthologies. The text doesn鈥檛 provide much background information about Ampleforth, but there is nothing to suggest that he isn鈥檛 a loyal Party member. Winston is surprised when he meets Ampleforth in the holding cell in the Ministry of Love. Ampleforth suspects that his particular thoughtcrime was to allow the word 鈥淕od鈥 to remain at the end of a line of a Kipling poem he was revising. Ampleforth explains indignantly that there was simply no other rhyme 鈥 his hands were tied by the limitations of the English language. In the context of the novel, Ampleforth鈥檚 punishment illustrates that no other loyalty 鈥 even aesthetic 鈥 is permissible under authoritarianism.

1984 Character List (Continued)

Syme

Another of Winston鈥檚 colleagues in the Records Department, Syme is an expert on Newspeak. The text describes Syme 鈥渧enomously orthodox鈥 鈥 though in 鈥渁n intellectual way.鈥 Considering Syme鈥檚 orthodoxy, it鈥檚 puzzling when Winston thinks that 鈥淥ne of these days鈥yme will be vaporized.鈥 (Winston is correct 鈥 Syme is vaporized a few weeks later.) Winston鈥檚 statement follows Syme鈥檚 declaration that 鈥淥rthodoxy is unconsciousness.鈥 According to Winston, this shows that 鈥淸Syme] is too intelligent鈥ees too clearly and speaks too plainly.鈥 As I read it, Syme鈥檚 crime is his dedication to Newspeak as an intellectual exercise rather than as an ideological necessity. Ultimately, what dooms Syme is 鈥渄iscretion, aloofness, a sort of saving stupidity.鈥

1984 Character List 鈥 Additional Resources

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