MememyselfandIJK wrote:@stephen50rightFor your other post about 1984 (thanks google cache), I would like to point out that the book was directed at the Authoritarian right not the left. Orwell himself was a libertarian socialist who opposed Stalinism and communism only due to left in0fighting during the Spanish civil war. However, 1984 was an attack on fascism/authority in general. It was due to the cold war that the cover art and public interpretation made it seem more of a criticism of communism.
Look it up if you don't believe me.
The book was written with totalitarianism in mind, but Orwell was worried about authoritarianism masked in the words of socialists and people on the left. While the plot features a regime that is a completely warped socialist government which is socialist in name only, the book is more accurately a warning against authoritarianism in general: left-wing authoritarianism is no longer recognizable in terms of form and function from right-wing authoritarianism in the book, which is one of the main points Orwell was making.
An important note to make, Orwell was an avowed
democratic socialist, which is not the same as libertarian socialist.
If you read
1984 and liked it, I recommend you check out
Homage to Catalonia, Down and Out, and the collected
Essays by Orwell (available in one volume). His non-fiction was far superior to his works of fiction (although I've always had a doubleplus bellyfeel for
1984). You sound interested in how his views changed due to his experiences in Spain. Reading his thoughts in
Homage are pretty illuminating and it's really interesting to see the politics from his perspective.
Thunderhawk wrote:Given that the authoritarian regime at the time of 1984's publication was the Soviet Union, I think it makes sense to see and draw connections to the USSR. I have never read road to Wigan pier (on my list of things to read), but Ive been told it show cases Orwell expectations and dislike of the bureaucrats that come to power under Socialist governments. Seems like his criticisms (in novel form) are well suited for application to the USSR, even if that application was not the intent.
I haven't read
Wigan Pier, but I wouldn't be surprised if that's in there.
Homage is a pretty scathing rebuke of Soviet policy not just in Spain, but the way the Soviets projected their policies abroad. He basically directly accuses the USSR (stopping short of accusing Stalin himself) of working against communism in order to play politics, maintain their own grip on power at home, and stay in the business of selling arms and exploiting nations/factions like Republican Spain.
"I don't know if you're a detective or a pervert."
"Well, that's for me to know and you to find out."
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