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1984

1984. Background Information. George Orwell. Born Eric Blair in 1903 in Bengal, India Returned to England to study at Eton Studied at Eton under Aldous Huxley, who later wrote the anti-utopian classic Brave New World

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1984

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  1. 1984 Background Information

  2. George Orwell • Born Eric Blair in 1903 in Bengal, India • Returned to England to study at Eton • Studied at Eton under Aldous Huxley, who later wrote the anti-utopian classic Brave New World • Worked as a member of the Indian Imperial police in Burma and hated how the job coarsened his attitude and behavior towards people

  3. George Orwell Part 2 • Felt the need to escape “every form of man’s dominion over man” • Became a socialist because he hated the social injustice inherent in class-based societies • Fought in the Spanish Civil War with socialist and communist workers in Madrid, but became disillusioned when bitter internal dissension occurred • Died in 1950 at age forty-six of a tubercular hemorrhage

  4. Historical and Literary Context • First half of twentieth century was a time of great tension and uncertainty: • WWI • WWII • Revolutions in Russia and China • Spanish Civil War • Rise of totalitarian governments in Germany, USSR, and Italy • Worldwide economic depression

  5. Historical and Literary ContextPart 2 • Communism: • Based on the writings of Karl Marx (Communist Manifesto) • theory about government and economics that supports the elimination of private property; system in which all goods are owned commonly and are available to all as needed

  6. Historical and Literary ContextPart 3 • Socialism: • category of economic and political theories advocating collective governmental ownership and administration of the production and distribution of goods • Stage of society in Marxist theory between capitalism (economic system characterized by private or cooperate ownership) and communism

  7. Historical and Literary ContextPart 4 • Totalitarianism: • Form of government with a strong central rule where citizens are subject to absolute state authority • Theoretically no individual freedoms are allowed and people who are disloyal are arrested, tried, sent to labor camps, deported, and/or executed • Fascist Italy under Mussolini, Nazi Germany under Hitler, and Soviet Union under Stalin

  8. 1984 • First published in 1949 to critical acclaim in the United Kingdom and United States • Reflects Orwell’s past as well as his vision of the future where the horrors of totalitarianism are totally realized • Influenced by the turmoil of the first half of the twentieth century

  9. 1984Part 2 • Satire that exaggerates problems in society to suggest reform • Influenced by Swift’s famous satire Gulliver’s Travels (1726), but lacks the same level of comedy found in Swift • Portrays a dystopia: a negative utopia; a place where individuals live dehumanized and frightening lives

  10. 1984Part 3 • Big Brother’s appearance is influenced by Stalin: “heavy black mustached and ruggedly handsome features”

  11. 1984Part 4 • The Party’s Three-Year Plans allude to Stalin’s Five-Year Plans • Stalin also conducted purge trials to exile or execute potential enemies • Anyone with a higher education was suspected • The novel critiques power-worship: “The Party seeks power entirely for its own sake. We are not interested in the good of others; we are interested solely in power.” (Part Three of 1984)

  12. 1984Part 5 • Themes: • Individual vs. State • Nature of Truth and History • Dangers of Totalitarianism • Machiavellian power for power’s sake • Mind Control: psychological manipulation and the power of language • (and the role of technology in all of the above)

  13. 1984Part 6 • “Orwellian” • Subordination of an individual’s interests to those of the state • Setting: 1984 in London, chief city of Airstrip One, one of the largest provinces of Oceania • POV: 3rd Person Limited (Winston)

  14. 1984Totalitarian Mechanisms: • “2 minutes hate • minispeak • telescreens • Big Brother (the persona) • Youth League • Emmanuel Goldstein In groups develop an explanation for each mechanism’s effectiveness and come up with one contemporary analogue.

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