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  1. He remembers seeing Julia on a bitter-cold day that March. She had thickened and stiffened, and he now found the thought of sex with her repulsive. They acknowledged that they had betrayed one another, and agreed to meet again, though neither is truly interested in continuing their relationship.

  2. Quick answer: In 1984, Julia is tortured and brainwashed. By the end of the book, she is a shadow of her former self, with a facial scar that indicates some kind of physical abuse. Her change...

  3. Now that [Winston and Julia] had a secure hiding place, almost a home, it did not even seem a hardship that they could only meet infrequently and for a couple of hours at a time. What mattered was that the room over the junk shop should exist.

  4. Winston and Julia are captured, and Mr. Charrington turns out to be a member of the Thought Police. Analysis Chapters 9 and 10 signify the culmination of all of the novel's previous events; Winston believes he is now a part of the secret Brotherhood and revels in his new status, feeling comfortable for the first time in the novel.

  5. How is Julias rebellion against the Party different than Winston’s rebellion? Why is Julia attracted to Winston? Why does O’Brien pretend to be part of the Brotherhood?

  6. Winston warns Julia that if she continues to see him she will die. He tells her that at the end they must not betray each other, though whether they do or not will not make any difference in what happens to them.

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  8. Julia is arrested, as Winston is, towards the end of 1984. She is, presumably, put through a similar treatment to Winston’s which results in an alternated mental state. On his end, he’s tortured with his worst fear until he finally gives in, telling O’Brien to take the rats away and “Do it to Julia” instead.