blufive: (Default)
blufive ([personal profile] blufive) wrote2003-12-26 11:14 am

Just read: Nineteen Eighty-Four, George Orwell

[amazon.co.uk]
Oceania is at war with Eastasia. It has always been at war with Eastasia. Winston Smith knows that this is not true - Oceania was allied with Eastasia in the recent past - but as a worker in the Ministry of Truth, it is his job to rewrite history to match the party line. He knows that life used to be better than this - at least, he thinks he can remember when it was, but, thanks to the Ministry, there is no written evidence left. Knowing that he is doomed to fail, Winston decides to rebel.

A lot has been written about Orwell's great political dystopia, and I doubt that I can add any great insights, but here goes...

As a novel, I think Nineteen Eighty-Four suffers somewhat from the Expository Lump, occasionally reading like a political info-dump (totalitarian-state-HOWTO, anyone?) However, given the quality and power of the political message it carries, it seems churlish to complain about such things.

The exceptional description of a grim, gritty London, watched over by thought police, left me feeling paranoid and dirty just by reading it, and a sense of opression permeates every word.

Despite being written over fifty years ago, the political message is still relevant. If anything, in today's world of global, politically-influenced TV news networks, the message is even more important than when Orwell wrote it.

Read it.

Re: There *is* hope in the proles

[identity profile] blufive.livejournal.com 2003-12-26 01:42 pm (UTC)(link)
No, 'cause I'm a dope and don't notice these things until they're pointed out.

I had, just about, picked up an undercurrent of hope from the the main body of the book, but it's a nice touch to have a few more hints about.