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George Orwell's 1984. History and Background – Literature as metaphor. Context. World War 2 – 1939-1945 A conflict between the allied powers US (1941), British, Soviet Union There were many others, but these were the big three. Context. World War 2 – 1939-1945
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George Orwell's 1984 History and Background – Literature as metaphor
Context • World War 2 – 1939-1945 • A conflict between the allied powers • US (1941), British, Soviet Union • There were many others, but these were the big three
Context • World War 2 – 1939-1945 • A conflict between the allied powers • And the Axis Powers:
Context • World War 2 – 1939-1945 • A conflict between the allied powers • And the Axis Powers: • Nazi Germany, Italy, Japan
Context • Germany fell in May 1945, leaving a HUGE power vacuum in Europe
Context • Germany fell in May 1945, leaving a HUGE power vacuum in Europe • The leaders of the US/Britain and the Soviet Union had a chance to finally look at the other side, rather than focusing so much on the war effort
Context • What they saw: • HUGE differences in structure, both through style of government and economic distribution
Context • Capitalism/Free Market • The means of production are privately owned, operated, and regulated • Rate of production (how much is made) and the price of goods are dictated by supply/demand
Context • Planned/Socialist • The government owns, controls, and regulates the means of production • Rate of production and cost are dictated by government, private price-setting is generally not allowed.
Context • The US made it a mission to “preserve” their way of life by preventing the threat of Socialism/Communism
Context • The US made it a mission to “preserve” their way of life by preventing the threat of Socialism/Communism • Russia, headed by Joseph Stalin, held a similar policy of expansion
Context • As a result, by 1949, The Soviet Union had gone from friend of the allies (Britain/US) to a potential threat.
The Players: • Leon Trotsky
Trotsky • An Early Party Leader under Lenin • Came into disfavor as Stalin rose to power, eventually was demonized by Stalin’s new Party. • Even after his exile, rumors were kept alive that he was around and causing trouble…a Soviet boogey-man!
Trotsky • “Trotskyism” – a marxist philosophy which did not oppose Stalinism, merely existed alongside of it – his popularity was a threat to Stalin’s personal power. • Opposed the non-aggression pact between SU and Germany • Assassinated in Mexico by a Spanish-born Soviet agent
The Players • Leon Trotsky • Josef Stalin
Stalin • Began consolidating power when Lenin died in 1924 • Replaced Lenin’s plans with a series of 5-year plans, focusing on a cult of personality and a consolidation of personal power
Context • The cold war was dominated by three elements:
Context • The cold war was dominated by three elements: • Fear
Context • The cold war was dominated by three elements: • Fear • Suspicion
Context • The cold war was dominated by three elements: • Fear • Suspicion • Power
Context • The cold war was dominated by three elements: • Fear • The Red Menace, WW3 • Suspicion • Your neighbor could be a red… • Power • Mutually Assured Destruction • Tech and Arms Races to keep up with the Soviets
About the Author • “George Orwell” was the pen name of Eric Blair. • Orwell was an Englishman born in India in 1903. He died at age 47. • Orwell was educated at Eton, a prestigious boarding school in England.
More About the Author • Orwell decided to skip college and work as a British Imperial Policeman in Burma • He hated working in Burma and returned to English on sick-leave • Once back in England he dedicated himself to writing full time. • 1984 was written in 1948
Orwell’s Political Views • He considered himself a democratic socialist and was critical of communism • He hated intellectuals, lying, cruelty, political authority, and totalitarianism • He strongly opposed Stalin and Hitler -- he was very outspoken during WWII
Orwell’s Political Views • It is PHENOMENALLY important to remember: when he wrote 1984, essentially a satire critical of Stalinism, the Allies were still happy with the Soviet Union…it was not until 1949 that this broke down and he was able to publish his novel.
1984: Setting and Genre • Futuristic, cautionary novel • Setting: London, in the mythical country of Oceania, 1984 (in the future)
Characters: Winston Smith • Winston Smith: Main character and the narrator of the story. • Winston is a 39 year old low-ranking member of the ruling Party • He secretly hates Big Brother and harbors revolutionary dreams • Winston is thin, frail, contemplative, intellectual
Characters: Julia • Julia is Winston’s 25 year old lover • She is a beautiful, dark-haired woman who enjoys sex and claims to have had affairs with many Party members • She is optimistic and her rebellion is small and personal
Characters: O’Brien • A mysterious, powerful, and sophisticated member of the Inner Party • Winston believes O’Brien is a member of the “Brotherhood” -- a legendary group of anti-Party rebels • Winston trusts and admires O’Brien, but never quite figures him out
Characters: Mr. Charrington • A kind and encouraging old man who runs a second-hand shop in the prole district • He rents Winston and Julia a room without a telescreen so they can carry on their love affair • He seems supportive of Winston’s rebellion against the Party
Characters: Big Brother • Big Brother is the perceived ruler of Oceania -- he looks like a combination of Hitler and Stalin • Big Brother’s God-like image is stamped on coins and projected on telescreens -- his face is unavoidable
1984: Oceania’s Ranks • Oceania is a huge country ruled by The Party, which is led by a figure called “Big Brother” • The Inner Party (1% of pop.) control the country • The Outer Party (18% of pop.) are controlled by the Inner Party • The Proles (81% of pop.) are the labor power who live in poverty • The Brotherhood is an underground rebellion organization lead by Emmanuel Goldstein
1984: Newspeak • Newspeak is the official language of Oceania • The goal of the Party is to have Newspeak replace Oldspeak (standard English) • Newspeak eliminates undesirable words and invents new words -- all to force Party conformity
1984: Doublethink • Doublethink is the manipulation of the mind by making people accept contradictions • Doublethink makes people believe that the Party is the only institution that knows right from wrong • “The Ministry of Truth” (where Winston works) changes history, facts, and memories to promote Doublethink
1984: Ministries • Ministry of Truth (MINITRU) • Ministry of Peace (MINIPAX) • Ministry of Love (MINILUV) • Ministry of Plenty (MINIPLENTY)
1984: Story Overview • Winston is sick of his job fabricating and changing history at the “Ministry of Truth” • As we first meet him, he understands something is dangerously wrong with the world, seeing the contradictions in the Party slogans: War is Peace, Freedom is Slavery, Ignorance is Strength • He also is painfully aware of the consequences for even THINKING these things…