Book contents
- Frontmatter
- 1 A political writer
- 2 Orwell and the biographers
- 3 Englands His Englands
- 4 The truths of experience: Orwell’s nonfiction of the 1930s
- 5 The fictional realist: novels of the 1930s
- 6 Orwell’s essays as a literary experience
- 7 ‘My country, right or left’: Orwell’s patriotism
- 8 Orwell and the British Left
- 9 Orwell, anti-Semitism and the Holocaust
- 10 Orwell, Socialism and the Cold War
- 11 Animal Farm: history as fable
- 12 Nineteen Eighty-Four: context and controversy
- 13 Orwell, the academy and the intellectuals
- 14 Orwell for today’s reader: an open letter
- 15 George Orwell: a bibliographic essay
- 16 Why Orwell still matters
- Further reading
- Index
16 - Why Orwell still matters
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 28 July 2007
- Frontmatter
- 1 A political writer
- 2 Orwell and the biographers
- 3 Englands His Englands
- 4 The truths of experience: Orwell’s nonfiction of the 1930s
- 5 The fictional realist: novels of the 1930s
- 6 Orwell’s essays as a literary experience
- 7 ‘My country, right or left’: Orwell’s patriotism
- 8 Orwell and the British Left
- 9 Orwell, anti-Semitism and the Holocaust
- 10 Orwell, Socialism and the Cold War
- 11 Animal Farm: history as fable
- 12 Nineteen Eighty-Four: context and controversy
- 13 Orwell, the academy and the intellectuals
- 14 Orwell for today’s reader: an open letter
- 15 George Orwell: a bibliographic essay
- 16 Why Orwell still matters
- Further reading
- Index
Summary
As I was beginning to write this Afterword, I received two invitations, both of them from London, in the space of two days. The first came from the BBC's 'Open Book' radio programme, which forwards readers' queries and difficulties to supposed 'experts', and invites them to act as 'radio doctors' giving advice to patients. Here was what my own patient complained of, in email form:
I have always wanted to read Nineteen Eighty-Four by George Orwell. I have tried and tried but get lost very quickly and haven't managed to have gotten past chapter 3. I have difficulty picturing the scenes described in the book. I have never had so much difficulty with a book, and it would be a big achievement if I could read, understand and love the book. I believe it is a brilliant piece of literature and feel I am missing out. I have tried to track down the film which I thought might help.
My second invitation was from the Frontline Club, a group of war and foreign correspondents who meet to discuss new books and films in their general area of interest. A new documentary had been made, about 'Orwellian' manipulation of the media in the United States, and the invitation closed with the ominous proposition that '1984' might not be 'just a date in the future'.
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- Information
- The Cambridge Companion to George Orwell , pp. 201 - 207Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2007
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