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Room 101 comes from the ] '']'' by ]. | |||
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'''Room 101''' is a ] chamber in which a prisoner is subjected to his worst ]. Such is the omniscience of the state in the totalitarian society of ''1984'' that even a citizen's nightmares are known to the authorities. The nightmare - and therefore the threatened punishment - of the protagonist Winston Smith is to have his face gnawed by ]s. Smith saves himself by begging the authoritites to let his girlfriend, Julia, (he is married but has not seen his wife in years) have her face gnawed out by the ferocious rodents. | |||
Room 101 is supposedly named after a conference room at ] where Orwell used to sit through tedious meetings. | |||
Room 101, like ], is often used in ] to give a sinister meaning to what would otherwise be an unremarkable room. For example, ] lives in '''Room 101''' at the beginning of the ] movie '']''. | |||
''For information about the TV series of the same name, see ].'' |
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