220- ] English Literature
George Orwell
Summary
George
Orwell (born June 25, 1903, Motihari, Bengal, India—died January 21, 1950,
London, England) was an English novelist, essayist, and critic famous for his
novels Animal Farm (1945) and Nineteen Eighty-four (1949). The latter of these
is a profound anti-utopian novel that examines the dangers of totalitarian
rule.
Born
Eric Arthur Blair, Orwell never entirely abandoned his original name, but his
first book, Down and Out in Paris and London, appeared in 1933 as the work of
George Orwell (the surname he derived from the beautiful River Orwell in East
Anglia). In time his nom de plume became so closely attached to him that few
people but relatives knew his real name was Blair. The change in name corresponded
to a profound shift in Orwell’s lifestyle, in which he changed from a pillar of
the British imperial establishment into a literary and political rebel.
Early
life
He
was born in Bengal, India, into the class of sahibs. His father was a minor British
official in the Indian civil service; his mother, of French extraction, was the
daughter of an unsuccessful teak merchant in Burma (Myanmar). Their attitudes
were those of the “landless gentry,” as Orwell later called lower-middle-class
people whose pretensions to social status had little relation to their income.
Orwell was thus brought up in an atmosphere of impoverished snobbery. After
returning with his parents to England, he was sent in 1911 to a preparatory
boarding school on the Sussex coast, where he was distinguished among the other
boys by his poverty and his intellectual brilliance. He grew up a morose,
withdrawn, eccentric boy, and he was later to tell of the miseries of those
years in his posthumously published autobiographical essay, Such, Such Were the
Joys (1953).
Orwell
won scholarships to two of England’s leading schools, Wellington and Eton, and
briefly attended the former before continuing his studies at the latter, where
he stayed from 1917 to 1921. Aldous Huxley was one of his masters, and it was
at Eton that Orwell published his first writing in college periodicals. Instead
of matriculating at a university, Orwell decided to follow family tradition
and, in 1922, went to Burma as assistant district superintendent in the Indian
Imperial Police. He served in a number of country stations and at first
appeared to be a model imperial servant. Yet from boyhood he had wanted to
become a writer, and when he realized how much against their will the Burmese
were ruled by the British, he felt increasingly ashamed of his role as a
colonial police officer. Later he was to recount his experiences and his
reactions to imperial rule in his novel Burmese Days and in two brilliant
autobiographical sketches, “Shooting an Elephant” and “A Hanging,” classics of
expository prose.
Against
imperialism
In
1927 Orwell, on leave to England, decided not to return to Burma, and on
January 1, 1928, he took the decisive step of resigning from the imperial
police. Already in the autumn of 1927 he had started on a course of action that
was to shape his character as a writer. Having felt guilty that the barriers of
race and caste had prevented his mingling with the Burmese, he thought he could
expiate some of his guilt by immersing himself in the life of the poor and outcast
people of Europe. Donning ragged clothes, he went into the East End of London
to live in cheap lodging houses among laborers and beggars; he spent a period
in the impoverished sections of Paris and worked as a dishwasher in French
hotels and restaurants; he tramped the roads of England with professional
vagrants and joined the working-class people of London in their annual exodus
to work in the hopfields of Kent.
Those
experiences gave Orwell the material for Down and Out in Paris and London, in
which actual incidents are rearranged into something like fiction. The book’s
publication in 1933 earned him some initial literary recognition. Orwell’s
first novel, Burmese Days (1934), established the pattern of his subsequent
fiction in its portrayal of a sensitive, conscientious, and emotionally
isolated individual who is at odds with an oppressive or dishonest social
environment. The main character of Burmese Days is a minor administrator who
seeks to escape from the dreary and narrow-minded chauvinism of his fellow
British colonialists in Burma. His sympathies for the Burmese, however, end in
an unforeseen personal tragedy. The protagonist of Orwell’s next novel, A
Clergyman’s Daughter (1935), is an unhappy spinster who achieves a brief and
accidental liberation in her experiences among some agricultural laborers. Keep
the Aspidistra Flying (1936) is about a literarily inclined bookseller’s
assistant who despises the empty commercialism and materialism of middle-class
life but who in the end is reconciled to bourgeois prosperity by his forced
marriage to the girl he loves.
Orwell’s
revulsion against imperialism led not only to his personal rejection of the
bourgeois lifestyle but to a political reorientation as well. Immediately after
returning from Burma he called himself an anarchist and continued to do so for
several years; during the 1930s, however, he began to consider himself a
socialist, though he was too libertarian in his thinking ever to take the
further step—so common in the period—of declaring himself a communist.
From
The Road to Wigan Pier to World War II
Orwell’s
first socialist book was an original and unorthodox political treatise titled
The Road to Wigan Pier (1937). It begins by describing his experiences when he
went to live among the destitute and unemployed miners of northern England,
sharing and observing their lives; it ends in a series of sharp criticisms of
existing socialist movements. It combines mordant reporting with a tone of
generous anger that was to characterize Orwell’s subsequent writing.
By
the time The Road to Wigan Pier was in print, Orwell was in Spain; he went to
report on the Civil War there and stayed to join the Republican militia,
serving on the Aragon and Teruel fronts and rising to the rank of second
lieutenant. He was seriously wounded at Teruel, with damage to his throat
permanently affecting his voice and endowing his speech with a strange,
compelling quietness. Later, in May 1937, after having fought in Barcelona
against communists who were trying to suppress their political opponents, he
was forced to flee Spain in fear of his life. The experience left him with a
lifelong dread of communism, first expressed in the vivid account of his
Spanish experiences, Homage to Catalonia (1938), which many consider one of his
best books.
Returning
to England, Orwell showed a paradoxically conservative strain in writing Coming
Up for Air (1939), in which he uses the nostalgic recollections of a
middle-aged man to examine the decency of a past England and express his fears
about a future threatened by war and fascism. When World War II did come,
Orwell was rejected for military service, and instead he headed the Indian
service of the British Broadcasting Corporation (BBC). He left the BBC in 1943
and became literary editor of the Tribune, a left-wing socialist paper
associated with the British Labour leader Aneurin Bevan. At this period Orwell
was a prolific journalist, writing many newspaper articles and reviews,
together with serious criticism, like his classic essays on Charles Dickens and
on boys’ weeklies and a number of books about England (notably The Lion and the
Unicorn, 1941) that combined patriotic sentiment with the advocacy of a
libertarian, decentralist socialism very much unlike that practiced by the
British Labour Party.
Animal
Farm and Nineteen Eighty-four
In
1944 Orwell finished Animal Farm, a political fable based on the story of the
Russian Revolution and its betrayal by Joseph Stalin. In the book a group of
barnyard animals overthrow and chase off their exploitative human masters and
set up an egalitarian society of their own. Eventually the animals’ intelligent
and power-loving leaders, the pigs, subvert the revolution and form a
dictatorship whose bondage is even more oppressive and heartless than that of
their former human masters. (“All animals are equal, but some animals are more
equal than others.”) At first Orwell had difficulty finding a publisher for the
small masterpiece, but when it appeared in 1945, Animal Farm made him famous
and, for the first time, prosperous.
Animal
Farm was one of Orwell’s finest works, full of wit and fantasy and admirably
written. It has, however, been overshadowed by his last book, Nineteen
Eighty-four (1949), a novel he wrote as a warning after years of brooding on
the twin menaces of Nazism and Stalinism. The novel is set in an imaginary
future in which the world is dominated by three perpetually warring
totalitarian police states. The book’s hero, the Englishman Winston Smith, is a
minor party functionary in one of those states. His longing for truth and
decency leads him to secretly rebel against the government, which perpetuates
its rule by systematically distorting the truth and continuously rewriting
history to suit its own purposes. Smith has a love affair with a like-minded
woman, but then they are both arrested by the Thought Police. The ensuing
imprisonment, torture, and reeducation of Smith are intended not merely to
break him physically or make him submit but to root out his independent mental
existence and his spiritual dignity until he can love only the figure he
previously most hated: the apparent leader of the party, Big Brother.
Smith’s
surrender to the monstrous brainwashing techniques of his jailers is tragic
enough, but the novel gains much of its power from the comprehensive rigor with
which it extends the premises of totalitarianism to their logical end: the love
of power and domination over others has acquired its perfected expression in
the perpetual surveillance and omnipresent dishonesty of an unassailable and
irresistible police state under whose rule every human virtue is slowly being
suborned and extinguished. Orwell’s warning of the potential dangers of
totalitarianism made a deep impression on his contemporaries and upon
subsequent readers, and the book’s title and many of its coined words and
phrases (“Big Brother is watching you,” “newspeak,” “doublethink”) became
bywords for modern political abuses.
Orwell
wrote the last pages of Nineteen Eighty-four in a remote house on the Hebridean
island of Jura, which he had bought from the proceeds of Animal Farm. He worked
between bouts of hospitalization for tuberculosis, of which he died in a London
hospital in January 1950.
Animal
Farm, anti-utopian satire by George Orwell, published in 1945. One of Orwell’s finest
works, it is a political fable based on the events of Russia’s Bolshevik
revolution and the betrayal of the cause by Joseph Stalin. The book concerns a
group of barnyard animals who overthrow and chase off their exploitative human
masters and set up an egalitarian society of their own. Eventually the animals’
intelligent and power-loving leaders, the pigs, subvert the revolution.
Concluding that “all animals are equal, but some animals are more equal than
others” (with its addendum to the animals’ seventh commandment: “All animals
are equal”), the pigs form a dictatorship even more oppressive and heartless
than that of their former human masters.
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