With these slogans,
George Orwell's NINETEEN EIGHTY FOUR burst upon the literary world as
the definitive anti-utopian novel for the second half of the 20th Century.
Published in 1949,
this darkly cautionary and prescient vision of the near future was a
warning against the dangers of a totalitarian government fueled by high
technology. Orwell envisions a world devastated by nuclear war and poverty,
where the West has fallen under the spell of a totalitarian socialist
dictator, Big Brother. A political demagogue and religious cult leader
all rolled into one, Big Brother's power and mystery are so immense
that one may wonder if he even exists at all.
Big Brother's Ingsoc
Party (English Socialism) has perfected the uses of high technology
to monitor the lives of its populace, and to insure unswerving loyalty
through surveillance, propaganda and brainwashing. The government's
most brilliant and most appalling project is the actual deconstruction
of the English language into Newspeak, the language of the Party. Each
successive edition of the Newspeak Dictionary has fewer words than its
predecessor. By removing meaning and nuance from the vocabulary, the
government hopes to eradicate seditious and anti-social thinking before
it even has the chance to enter a person's mind. Without the vocabulary
for revolution, there can be no revolution. For those who persist in
thinking for themselves, so-called Thought Criminals, Ingsoc's stormtroopers,
the Thought Police, are there to intervene, incarcerating the free-thinkers
in the Ministry of Love, where they will be re-educated, or worse.
The most intrusive
daily aspect of life in Oceania (as Orwell calls the European/American
mega-State) are the omnipresent telescreens, two-way interactive televisions
that cannot be turned off, and which give the government a faceless
surveillance window into everyone's life. Who is on the other side of
the telescreens? Are people watching? Is all the monitoring done by
machine? All we learn is that members of the Inner Party, the elite,
are allowed to turn off their telescreens, if only for a brief period.
Winston Smith, the
protagonist of Orwell's novel, becomes a Thought Criminal. A minor bureaucrat
(an "Outer Party" member) his job is to actually rewrite the
archives of the London Times so that they are consistent with current
Ingsoc policy. When Ingsoc changes its political alliance with another
superpower and begins waging war on a former ally, Winston's job is
to rewrite all the prior information to show that the old alliance never
existed. So addled are the minds of the people he meets that they don't
even realize that these changes have been made. A sad, lonely man, Winston
is also smart enough to understand the insidious manipulation being
perpetrated on the society.
And so he becomes
a willing victim of the government's most ingenious ruse: Winston obtains
a copy of a banned revolutionary tract by the famous enemy of the State,
Goldstein. Galvanized and inspired by what he reads, he pursues an illicit
love affair with a co-worker,Julia, and seems to find an ally in the
person of Inner Party official O'Brien. Longing for an escape from this
terrible world to a better life, he does not realize that everything
has been a set-up. Kindly O'Brien is actually the head of the Thought
Police, and it is he who has actually written Goldstein's book for the
very purpose of luring potential revolutionaries out of the closet and
into the dreaded Room 101 - a torture chamber where one's worst fears
are made real. Totally broken, brainwashed and reprogrammed (so suggestible
that he is even made to agree that 2+2=5), Winston is returned to society
as another harmless devoté of Big Brother. In the chilling final
pages of the book, Winston, tears of fear and joy streaming down his
face, proclaims his love of Big Brother, all thoughts, hopes or dreams
of escape and freedom permanently eradicated from his consciousness.