8 June 1949 Secker & Warburg publishes George Orwell's dystopian speculative fiction novel "Nineteen Eighty-Four". The title is the year he wrote it with the last two digits swapped.
“The Party told you to reject the evidence of your eyes and ears. It was their final, most essential command.”
"War is peace.
Freedom is slavery.
Ignorance is strength."
Few novels have entered the political bloodstream like this one. Written as a warning against totalitarianism, the novel imagined a world of constant surveillance, rewritten history, controlled language, and enforced loyalty to “Big Brother.”
Many of the themes in Nineteen Eighty-Four are compelling and contemporary, foreshadowing the state of our world today and contain remarkable foresight given that it was first published in 1949.
The novel is set in 1984 in Great Britain, known as Airstrip One.The world has suffered through a global atomic war, and there are 3 superpowers called Oceania, Eurasia and Eastasia.
The standard of living is relatively low.The media is run by the government, which is known as Big Brother and the written word is perpetually changed to suit what the government requires.
People are controlled into what to think, how to act and how to live .It uses telescreens, fearmongering, media control and corruption to control the masses
One of the Party pillars in 1984 is endless war on a global scale. The war, however, is a fabrication accepted and treated as fact. For, unreal as it is, it is not meaningless. World powers become enemies and allies interchangeably simply to keep the masses in perpetual fear, perpetual industry, and perpetual order.
War provides outlet for unwanted emotions such as hate, patriotism, and discontent, keeping the structure of society intact and productive without raising the standard of living. The state of perpetual war described by Orwell is also reflected in the wars that have raged since 1945, across the globe from Afghanistan, Iraq, Syria, Yemen etc etc.
Winston Smith the main protagonist is an editor employed by the government and is one of many citizens responsible for rewriting history.In Nineteen Eighty-Four, government surveillance is constant and at the forefront. The state knows every move its citizens make, including their habits, whom they talk to, and what they are doing at any given time. Big Brother is watching and running the show. The people are sheep who are herded and controlled.
Throughout the book, Winston Smith, Orwell’s everyman, represents how “normal people” are forced under the guide of indistinct manipulation to conform to every wish and desire Big Brother can generate. The masses cannot know otherwise, only goodthink–which in Newspeak (the official language of Oceania), roughly translates to orthodoxy–is permissible. Notice the subtlety. Orthodoxy doesn’t necessarily imply goodness.
Yet the whole point of Newspeak is to constrict speech so as to make it impossible for heretical thoughts to be produced – after all, if you do not have maximum access to language, how can you mount a defense for yourself? How can you challenge external things when you have no way to articulate it? To think a “wrong” thought is thoughtcrime and to survive you must cancel it out (crimestop) and convince yourself that you believe something different and often contradictory (doublethink). Any thought, even one born of instinctive curiosity, is to be totally and completely suppressed forever.
How does Big Brother maintain this system of control? Do the masses not attempt to revolt? The low-class citizenry in “1984” are referred to as the “Proles,” and Big Brother keeps these people in line (the majority population) by loosening their control over them. Instead of being distracted with oppression, the Proles work tirelessly and are distracted with endless entertainment.Thus, they are effectively a non-issue.
Party members, on the contrary, are hermetically sealed within the confines of Party control. Every move and utterance they make is under close scrutiny, even in the most private parts of their home. The goal is to enforce goodthink and, over time, to contort one’s mind to the extent they trust Big Brother’s instincts over their own. It is not simply maintaining an allegiance; it’s about believing in Big Brother’s omnipotence with every fiber of your being.
Winston Smith embarks on a clandestine love affair with Julia, a party member, and joins The Brotherhood, an illegal organisation dedicated to the overthrow of Big Brother. He is caught,and taken to Room 101, alongside everyone else who offended is taken and subjected to torture and brainwashed and he along with everyone ends up loving Big Brother.
One might wait for a silver-lining, a breakthrough where Big Brother’s control is challenged and overturned to the masses; however, this time never comes. This bottled anxiety that buries itself in your shoulders while you read is what I believe Orwell intended for. It represents the pervasiveness of totalitarianism.
Orwell did not just write a dystopian novel. He gave us a vocabulary for recognising power when it lies, watches, rewrites, manipulates and demands obedience.
Published in post-war Britain, Nineteen Eighty-Four became one of the most chilling warnings ever written about authoritarianism, surveillance, propaganda and the destruction of truth.
Its genius is that it does not only imagine a state that controls what people do. It imagines a state that wants to control what people can say, what they can remember, what they are allowed to believe, and eventually what they are capable of thinking.
That is why it still feels so uncomfortable. Every generation finds its own version of 1984: mass surveillance, media manipulation, censorship, culture wars, disinformation, rewritten history, online monitoring and powerful people telling the public not to believe what is right in front of them.
Orwell understood that freedom does not always disappear in one dramatic moment. Sometimes it is chipped away quietly - word by word, lie by lie, fear by fear - until people begin censoring themselves. 1984 remains terrifying because it is not just about one nightmare future. It is about how easily truth can be broken when power decides reality belongs to them.
More than 75 years later, its vocabulary continues to spark intrigue and debate about its themes of censorship, totalitarianism, and historical revisionism —Big Brother, Thought Police, Newspeak, doublethink, Room 101— and still shapes how we talk about power, propaganda, and the loss of truth.
Today across the world there are a lock-up concentration camp style jails where unconvicted, ostensibly innocent individuals are held and openly abused. Electronic surveillance is now a common and accepted government practice: cell phone listening, cameras on corners and traffic lights, and electronic toll payment system tracking are all everyday occurrences.
By using our credit cards, shopping rewards cards, and even our driver's licenses, data are collected on all of us and sold and used daily, each of us daily profiled.
Orwell’s book was supposed to be a warning, not a guidebook on how to create a surveillance state. It really is remarkable how the many tools that were used to suppress in Nineteen Eighty–Four are now part of our everyday lives in 2020. Newspeak is the fictional language spoken in Nineteen Eighty-Four. It is a controlled and abbreviated version of English. Also known as “doublespeak!”. As George himself said " Political language... is designed to make lies sound truthful and murder respectable, and to give an appearance of solidity to pure wind.. "
Politicians continue to use language to deceive and manipulate, through concealment or misrepresentation of the truth, desperately and deliberately using euphemistic or ambiguous language as they have been doing ad infinitum. One of the objectives of Newspeak is also to decrease self-expression. With the popularity of texting, it would be fair to say that there are similarities. A
nd today we are so busy Facebooking, tweeting, etc, the following line from one of the characters that works for Big Brother. “The people will not revolt. They will not look up from their screens long enough to notice what’s happening.” is still amazingly uncanny.
Orwell may not have had a crystal ball, but he did have was an understanding of the human condition and its weakness. Orwell began writing the novel in 1944, and wrote the bulk of it while residing on the Scottish island Jura with no electricity and no running water.
Orwell was recently widowed, his wife having died during a surgical procedure. He was left with his young son, and he was seriously ill with tuberculosis. There was not a known cure for TB in 1947, and physicians typically prescribed fresh air and rest. Orwell was given streptomycin, which was an experimental drug in the US. He raced to finish his novel, and finished the manuscript in December 1948 and upon publication it became an instant success. Orwell died shortly after of a brain He died fourteen months later at the age of 46.
To write a book and not live long enough to see it gradually leave literature and enter the dictionary. Most novels grow old. Some even die. "1984" did something far more disturbing. It stayed. And continued waiting for each new generation with the patience of an old professor who knows perfectly well that his students will eventually arrive at exactly the same mistaken conclusions as their predecessors.
Eric Arthur Blair lived only forty-six years. Yet sometimes I think Orwell's real life began only after his death. Because there are writers who create books. And there are writers who create concepts.That is an entirely different category of literary immortality. The greatest irony is that today almost everyone knows who Big Brother is. Far fewer remember the name of the man who invented him. Which, quite honestly, is so Orwellian that Orwell himself would probably have laughed.
Nineteen Eighty-Four has been in publication ever since, has been translated into multiple languages, and is often heralded as one of the best novels of the 20th century. Still resonating in the times we live today, still worryingly reliable. Commenting on 1984, Orwell wrote, “I do not believe that the kind of society I describe necessarily will arrive, but I believe that something resembling it could arrive.”
In some cases, what is happening in the world today is more draconian and invasive than anything Orwell conceived. Despite Orwell's influence political journalism is as corrupt as ever. The corruption of language described in 1984 is widespread in the media today, with "Newspeak" terms such as democratic, socialist, fascist, war criminal, freedom fighter, racist and many other expressions being used in a deliberately deceptive, propagandistic way to whip up mass hysteria or simply to ensure that people can never achieve even an approximation of the truth.
We are today all living in a massive prison and George Orwell predicted it. The ability of Big Brother government to observe our every activity is increasing week by week and soon each and every car journey we make, every financial transaction we undertake, everywhere we go will be fed into a computer and if there is a slight variance from what they decide is the norm then we will be taken in and questioned.
Give the wrong answers and you could well end up in room like 101, or Belmarsh Jail, Guantanamo Bay etc.If this does not bother you, then carry on, you might be comfortable that 'Big Brother' is watching you, but I ask you who is watching Big Brother. Could someone tell the government and the opposition, because they don't seem to have been kicking up much of a fuss, that the George Orwell's book 1984 was a warning not an instruction manual. We should continue to be on guard, raise alarms, be objective, keep questioning and hold our individual Governments to account.
In 2003 a docudrama was released by the BBC, detailing the life and works of George Orwell. The documentary contains footage from his deathbed, and his final words are certainly chilling. You can here them in the following video. We can't say that we were never warned. 1984 has had a lasting impact on literature and culture, with its concepts and terminology widely adopted in popular culture. Is Nineteen Eighty-Four still the most important political novel ever written?
“There was truth and there was untruth, and if you clung to the truth even against the whole world, you were not mad.”
Citizens today should support bona fide civil liberties groups and actively oppose government measures restricting basic freedoms. Freedom of speech is a basic civil liberty and people should fight to retain it. They should defy group pressure, think for themselves and speak out. The price of liberty is eternal vigilance.We should continue to be on guard, raise alarms, be objective, keep questioning and hold our individual Governments to account.
“We are the dead. Our only true life is in the future. We shall take part in it as handfuls of dust and splinters of bone. But how far away that future may be, there is no knowing. It might be a thousand years. At present nothing is possible except to extend the area of sanity little by little. We cannot act collectively. We can only spread our knowledge outwards from individual to individual, generation after generation. In the face of the Thought Police there is no other way.” - George Orwell, Nineteen Eighty- Four