George Orwell
George Orwell
George Orwell
WAR IS PEACE
FREEDOM IS SLAVERY
IGNORANCE IS STRENGTH
the ability to love due to the cultural depths society has sunk to as a result
of Big Brothers control. The reason Nineteen Eighty-Four remained so
popular, and the reason society has adopted vocabulary from the book, is
because it serves as more than merely a fictional novel for the readers
entertainment. The novel served (and continues to serve) as a stark warning
of what the future may hold.
Big Brother: The Orwellian Nightmare Come True looks at
technology that now exists or is under development and will exist in the near
future, that threatens to make our world just as horrific as, or even worse
than the world George Orwell described. This book will provide information
from mainstream news sources, industry experts, and even patent numbers
of the most invasive and sinister Orwellian devices anyone could dream of.
We will also look at actual government programs and policies that seem as if
they came right out of Orwells dark imagination, such as the government
secretly paying mainstream media reporters to act as gate-keepers and
propagandists for the establishment, and the Police illegally spying on and
smearing peaceful political activists who were seen as problematic.
Are we not a part of an Orwellian world? Do students nowadays have
any knowledge of how the world was like 40 years ago? Orwells vision about
the future serves as a warning for what is already here, and what is soon to
come. It is scary because it holds so much truth, and yet amazing because
we proved to be our own enemies. We are being turned into numbers and
statistics, and mathematical formulas are used by employers to determine
whether an employee is being efficient enough. Social networking sites such
as Facebook have turned everyone into their own favorite celebrity and
supplement actual friendships and interactions. People dont need to get
together for a dinner party to catch up on each others lives anymore; we
just monitor their newsfeed on Facebook, from the comfort of our own home.
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Today Orwell's words are read differently. We live in a society that
seems the opposite of that portrayed by him perfectly. But then, just 4 years
after the end of World War II, Orwell wrote in a world that was prepared for
the 3rd World War. A world which found out of Nazi crimes and (probably at
least partially) from those of Stalinism. Then, the nearly 60 million deaths
were not just a statistic. Were parents, children or friends of those who
would read 1984. Then, in a dark world but full of expectations, hopes and
fears, 1984 was a probable future. Now we call it with a trace of vanity:
dystopia.
What made compelling the reading of 1984, was that it is essentially a
story about a man and most importantly for the existence of each of us
about hope. Winston Smith lives in a world in which this word is to be
executed and removed from the dictionary. With all his realism, Smith can
afford to get high with hope and (peak of nerve) with a little love. I
understand perfectly and I admired him. Although I felt from the very
beginning how this adventure will end, I liked every page and moved with
fear to the next paragraph knowing his approaching inevitable. I got the
impression that those moments of freedom, hope and love are worth the
price paid later.
It is very hard to "advertise" a book like 1984 for the 2013th students. I
do not really believe in the perfect book. I was captured by the fact that
1984 has absolutely everything you want from a book. It is truly imperative
reading. But at the same time I remain convinced that in order to understand
and appreciate the true 1984's value, we need a foundation consisting of
tens and hundreds of other books. And still, living in a country like Romania,
I really think it helps you understand the book very well.
After reading 1984, we found out that Big Brother can be any modern
dictator of the 20th century, and its name has become synonymous with
violation of the individual privacy by any totalitarian power. To control the all,
dictatorship has to know the most intimate thoughts, and no corner of the
human mind can remain unknown to the cold eye of Big Brother.
Before 1989, in Romania, in the communist totalitarian system, the
party was the one defining both what was allowed and what was forbidden.
To resume a formula of George Orwell, the totalitarian universe, everything
that was not forbidden was compulsory; including the duty of the people to
be happy, despite the bad conditions which condemned the system. At the
end of the communist regime in Romania, in November 1989, that congress
of shame and despair, The Communist Party had almost 4 million members.
It was therefore one of the largest communist party in the world
(proportionally speaking). In fact, it was a giant devoid of any internal life.
A conference of MARXISM- 2013
The School of Rebellion is a challenge to the capitalist school, where
education is an instrument "to facilitate integration of the younger
generation into the logic of the present system and bring about conformity".
The School of Rebellion is inspired by the "the practice of freedom, the
means by which men and women deal critically and creatively with reality
and discover how to participate in the transformation of their world.
The capitalist school sees the student as wage-slave, client and
consumer. The School of Rebellion sees students as agents of social
transformation and liberation. The capitalist school aims to produce a workready, disciplined and commodity thirsty citizen. The School of Rebellion
aims to encourage constructive, collective and organized rebellion.
By coming to understand the world and recognizing the need to
change it, children and young people can challenge a career centered
education and become agents of change. Such agency opens a magical door
to knowledge. This is what the School of Rebellion hopes for.
What need, then, of Orwell? One answer is that we should read him
because of his historical impact. For Orwell was the most influential political
writer of the 20th century. This is a bold claim, but who else would compete?
Among novelists, perhaps Alexander Solzhenitsyn or Albert Camus; among
playwrights, Bertolt Brecht. Or the novelist, playwright and philosopher JeanPaul Sartre, whom Orwell privately called "a bag of wind"? Take them one by
one, and you will find that each made an impact more limited in duration or
geographical scope than did this short-lived, old-fashioned English man of
letters.
Orwell the moralist is fascinated by the pursuit not merely of truth, but
of the most complicated and difficult truths. It starts already with the early
essay Shooting an Elephant, where he confidently asserts that the British
empire is dying but immediately adds that it is "a great deal better than the
younger empires that are going to supplant it". At times, he seems to take
an almost masochistic delight in confronting uncomfortable truths.
Not that his own political judgment was always good. His vivacious and
perceptive wife Eileen wrote that he retained "an extraordinary political
simplicity". There are striking misjudgments in his work. It's startling to find
him, early on, repeating the communist line that "fascism and capitalism are
at bottom the same thing".
As VS Pritchett observed, in reviewing The Lion and the Unicorn, he "is
capable of exaggerating with the simplicity and innocence of a savage". But
that is what satirists do. So this weakness of his non-fiction is one of the
great strengths of his fiction.
Both his life and his work are case studies in the demands of political
engagement. In Writers and Leviathan he describes the political writer's
dilemma: "seeing the need of engaging in politics while also seeing what a
dirty, degrading business it is". After briefly being a member of the
Independent Labour party, he concludes that "a writer can only remain
honest if he keeps free of party labels".
Finally, of course, Orwell's list, and Orwells life, is much less important
than the work. It matters, to be sure, that there is no flagrant contradiction
between the work and the life - as there often is with political intellectuals.
The Orwellian voice, placing honesty and single standards above everything,
would be diminished. But what endures is the work.
If I had to name a single quality that makes Orwell still essential
reading in the 21st century, it would be his insight into the use and abuse of
language. If you have time to read only one essay, read Politics and the
English Language. This brilliantly sums up the central Orwellian argument
that the corruption of language is an essential part of oppressive or
exploitative politics. "The defense of the indefensible" is sustained by a
battery of euphemisms, verbal false limbs, prefabricated phrases, and all the
other paraphernalia of deceit that he pinpoints and parodies.
The extreme, totalitarian version that he satirized as Newspeak is less
often encountered these days, except in countries such as Burma or North
Korea. But the obsession of democratically elected governments, especially
in Britain and America, with media management and "spin" is today one of
the main obstacles to understanding what is being done in our name. There
are also distortions that come from within the press, radio and television
Read Orwell, and you will know that something nasty must be hidden
behind the euphemistic, Latinate phrase used by Nato spokesmen during the
Kosovo war: "collateral damage". (It means innocent civilians killed.) Read
Orwell, and you will smell a rat whenever you find a newspaper boy or
politician once again churning out a prefabricated phrase such as "Brussels'
inexorable march to a European super state".