Search Results for: "politics and the english language"

Orwell in Defence of P. G. Wodehouse

The British author P. G. Wodehouse, best known for his Jeeves and Wooster stories, was in the news recently with the release of his MI5 files. A contemporary of Orwell’s, Wodehouse was interned by the Nazis in 1941 and controversially broadcast from Nazi Germany.

We’re very pleased to be able to bring you Orwell’s essay on the matter, ‘In Defence of P. G. Wodehouse’, on our website.
We’re very grateful to the Orwell Estate and Penguin Books for letting us publish it on our website, along with many other Orwell works, which you can read in our ‘By Orwell’ section.
And if you’re a Wodehouse fan, BBC2 are showing a programme tonight at 9pm, Wogan on Wodehouse.

Orwell Prize at The Times Cheltenham Literature Festival

From the archive

Pinch, punch, first of the month – and a chance to return to some Orwell essays first published in September. For now, we have ‘Shooting an Elephant’, about Orwell’s time in Burma, from 1936; and ‘The Art of Donald McGill’, on seaside postcard humour, from 1941.
Lady Bingham, widow of this year’s Book Prize winner, Tom Bingham, wrote to us this week to say: ‘You will be delighted to know that a friend had her copy of The Rule of Law confiscated by Syrian customs officials’. You can read the first chapter on our website.

From elsewhere

The Wartime Diaries

Over the last week, entries were published on 28th August.

The next entry will be published on 14th March.

The Hop-Picking Diaries

Over the last week, entries were published on 25th, 26th, 27th, 28th, 29th and 30th August.
The next entry will be published on 18th September.

The Wigan Pier Diaries

The final entry was published on 25th March. If you’ve got any suggestions about our website(s), we’d love to hear from you – email us on gavin.freeguard@mediastandardstrust.org or follow us on Twitter. And you can subscribe to this newsletter via email.

Buxton 2011: Is politics corrupted by corrupted language?

Speakers

Sadly, Nick Cohen had to pull out

Details

One of George Orwell’s most famous essays, Politics and the English Language, criticises the ‘staleness of imagery’ and ‘lack of precision’, particularly in political writing, where muddled language masks insincerity. ‘If thought corrupts language, language can also corrupt thought’. 65 years on, is it still ‘broadly true that political writing is bad writing’? What corruptions of language have appeared in the age of the internet and breaking news? What can be done to reverse the process?

Links

Video

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Buxton Festival Next Wednesday

A quick reminder that we’ll be at the Buxton Festival next Wednesday, asking the question ‘is politics corrupted by corrupted language?’, at 10.30am. Tickets are available from the Festival website.

The event is being held in the 65th anniversary year of Orwell’s famous essay, ‘Politics and the English Language’, and answering the question will be Nick Cohen (journalist and author, previously shortlisted for What’s Left? and longlisted for Waiting for the Etonians), Linda Grant (Orange Prize-winning and Booker Prize-shortlisted novelist, books include the recent We Had It So Good) and Matthew Parris (journalist and former MP, winner of the Orwell Prize for Journalism 2005, previously shortlisted for Chance Witness). Martin Moore, director of the Media Standards Trust (one of our partners), will be in the chair.

Johann Hari

You may be aware of allegations made about the winner of the Orwell Prize for Journalism 2008, Johann Hari. We made a statement about this last week, which you can read on our website.

From the archive and elsewhere

The Wartime Diaries

Over the last two weeks, entries were published on 30th June and 3rd and 6th July. The next entry will be published on 28th August.

The Wigan Pier Diaries

The final entry was published on 25th March. In addition to the blog, we have a Google Map tracking Orwell’s journey, a flickr set of archive images, and our page on The Road to Wigan Pier, with the first chapter and other links. If you’ve got any suggestions about our website(s), we’d love to hear from you – email us on gavin.freeguard@mediastandardstrust.org or follow us on Twitter. And you can subscribe to this newsletter via email.

Happy Birthday, George!

George Orwell was born on 25th June 1903, so tomorrow (Saturday) would have been his 108th birthday. You could celebrate with a birthday cake – perhaps made from one of Orwell’s own recipes. His unpublished 1946 essay, ‘British Cookery’, features a recipe for treacle tart and one for plum cake (as well as Christmas pudding and a controversial marmalade). You can read the full essay on our website, or view the original typescript in our flickr stream.

Buxton Festival, 13th July

To mark the 65th anniversary of Orwell’s essay, ‘Politics and the English Language’, we’ll be asking ‘is politics corrupted by corrupted language?’ at this year’s Buxton Festival, on 13th July at 10.30am. Our panel will consist of Nick Cohen (journalist and author, previously shortlisted for What’s Left? and longlisted for Waiting for the Etonians), Linda Grant (Orange Prize-winning and Booker Prize-shortlisted novelist, books include the recent We Had It So Good) and Matthew Parris (journalist and former MP, winner of the Orwell Prize for Journalism 2005, previously shortlisted for Chance Witness). Tickets are available from the Festival website. And you can watch our previous events at Buxton –Andrea Gillies in conversation with her publisher Rebecca Nicolson, Andrew Brown in conversation with David Blunkett MP, a debate on Orwell vs Dickens, and a discussion on ‘what makes a good political novel?’ – in our events archive.

From the archive

Burmese Days was published for the first time in the UK on this day in 1935. As you’d expect, there’s plenty about the book on our Burmese Days page, including the first chapter. We have Orwell’s preliminary sketches for Burmese Days (including ‘An Incident in Rangoon’, which reads like a short story – and we have video of it being read by actor Alan Cox); two of his major essays, ‘Shooting an Elephant’ and ‘A Hanging’; and plenty about the book from editor Peter Davison, academic Douglas Kerr and author and journalist Emma Larkin, among others. There’s also video of our own events on contemporary Burma, including our 2010 launch debate. This week is Independent Booksellers’ Week in the UK, so it’s a good time to revisit Orwell’s ‘Bookshop Memories’, about his own experience of bookselling. Two other Orwell essays, ‘Confessions of a Book Reviewer’ and ‘Good Bad Books’, might also be worth reading.

From elsewhere

The Wartime Diaries

Over the last week, entries were published on 19th, 20th, 22nd and 23rd June. Over the next week, entries will be published on 30th June.

The Wigan Pier Diaries

The final entry was published on 25th March. In addition to the blog, we have a Google Map tracking Orwell’s journey, a flickr set of archive images, and our page on The Road to Wigan Pier, with the first chapter and other links. If you’ve got any suggestions about our website(s), we’d love to hear from you – email us on gavin.freeguard@mediastandardstrust.org or follow us on Twitter. And you can subscribe to this newsletter via email.

At the Buxton Festival, 13th July

We’re thrilled to be returning to the Buxton Festival for a third year this July. To mark the 65th anniversary of Orwell’s famous essay, ‘Politics and the English Language’, Nick Cohen, Linda Grant and previous winner Matthew Parris will be answering the question, ‘is politics corrupted by corrupted language?’ You can read Orwell’s original essay on our website, along with another of his pieces on language, ‘In Front of Your Nose’. The event will take place at 10.30am on Wednesday 13th July, at the Palace Hotel, Buxton. Tickets are available for £10 on the Buxton Festival website, where you can also find out more about the rest of their literary programme.

Gordon Bowker

Orwell biographer Gordon Bowker’s latest subject is James Joyce. His biography of Joyce was Radio 4’s Book of the Week this week, and you can listen to the five episodes on the BBC website. Appropriately enough, Bloomsday – which celebrates Joyce and his novel, Ulysses – fell on Thursday this week. Gordon has kindly allowed us to publish another of his articles on Orwell, too, this time on ‘George Orwell and the Church of England’. The Spectator also published a piece on Orwell and religion this week, ‘Orwell vs God’, by Robert Gray. There’s much more from Gordon – and many others – on our ‘About Orwell’ page.

From the archive

Our previous visits to Buxton have generated some great debates. In 2009, previous winners Delia Jarrett-Macauley and Matthew Parris wondered ‘what makes a good political novel?’ with Chris Cleave, Marina Lewycka and Robert McCrum, and Book Prize winner Andrew Brown spoke to David Blunkett MP about Fishing in Utopia. In 2010, previous winner David Aaronovitch and D. J. Taylor argued for Orwell as the greatest political writer against Lucinda Hawksley and Michael Slater for Dickens, while Andrea Gillies talked about her winning book, Keeper, to her publisher, Rebecca Nicolson. And with James Joyce everywhere this week, why not read Orwell’s ‘Inside the Whale’, where Orwell describes the Irishman as ‘a kind of poet and also an elephantine pedant’ in a wide discussion on writers, art and politics? Or watch Canadian academic Pat Rae’s lecture on ‘Modernist Orwell’, a jargon-free argument about Orwell’s place in the literary canon?

From elsewhere

The Wartime Diaries

Over the last few week, entries were published on 14th June. Over the next week, entries will be published on 19th, 20th, 22nd and 23rd June.

The Wigan Pier Diaries

The final entry was published on 25th March. In addition to the blog, we have a Google Map tracking Orwell’s journey, a flickr set of archive images, and our page on The Road to Wigan Pier, with the first chapter and other links. If you’ve got any suggestions about our website(s), we’d love to hear from you – email us on gavin.freeguard@mediastandardstrust.org or follow us on Twitter. And you can subscribe to this newsletter via email.

Anniversary of 1984’s publication

Welcome back, after a few weeks away – including a trip to the first ever Orwell in Asia conference, organised by Tunghai University in Taiwan (more on that soon).

This Wednesday 8th June saw the 62nd anniversary of the publication of Nineteen Eighty-Four. The not-particularly-important anniversary of this important book proved very popular online, being one of the most popular tweets on twitter that day.
You can read the first chapter of 1984 on our dedicated 1984 webpage, along with lots of other pieces about the book. These include some of Orwell’s own articles on language (‘Politics and the English Language’ and ‘In Front of Your Nose’), dystopian fiction (on Zamyatin’s WeWe and Arthur Koestler) and other subjects (‘Just Junk’ and ‘Pleasure Spots’, both new to our site). We also have plenty of other treats: the original reviews of 1984 by The Guardian and the New Statesman (by V. S. Pritchett), articles by Bernard Crick, Robert Harris, Robert McCrum and Ben Pimlott and a video Q&A with Mike Radford (director of the 1984 film version of 1984). You can also watch the BBC’s 1954 TV adaptation on YouTube (Wikipedia has some more information on the controversy around the broadcast). There’s much more on our website.

This Sunday 12th June will be the 72nd anniversary of Coming Up for Air’s publication: first chapter and much more on our Coming Up for Air page.

Awards Ceremony 2011

Full video of this year’s Orwell Prize awards ceremony – including some wonderful speeches from judge Martin Bright, winners Jenni Russell and Graeme Archer, and Elizabeth Bingham (widow of Book Prize winner Tom Bingham) – can now be found on our YouTube Channel.

And remember – you can read the first chapter of the winning book, all of the winning journalism and the winning blogposts on our site.

From the archive

As well as ‘Just Junk’ (on junk shops like Mr Charrington’s in 1984) and ‘Pleasure Spots’, we’ve added two other Orwell essays to our site this week.
‘Why I Write’ is one of Orwell’s most famous essays, and where the Orwell Prize’s motto, ‘What I have most wanted to do… is to make political writing into an art’ comes from.

‘Benefit of Clergy’ is Orwell’s comment on Salvador Dali’s autobiography, his life and work and the relationship between artist and human being.

Thursday also marked the anniversary of the death of Charles Dickens, who died on 9th June 1870. Orwell’s critical essay on Dickens is in our ‘By Orwell’ section, and you can also watch our Orwell vs Dickens debates from the Oxford Literary Festival 2009 and Buxton Festival 2010.

From elsewhere

And last, but not least:

The wartime diaries

Over the last few weeks, entries were published on 21st, 24th, 25th and 31st May, and 1st, 3rd and 8th June. Over the next week, entries will be published on 14th June.

The Wigan Pier diaries

The final entry was published on 25th March. In addition to the blog, we have a Google Map tracking Orwell’s journey, a flickr set of archive images, and our page on The Road to Wigan Pier, with the first chapter and other links. If you’ve got any suggestions about our website(s), we’d love to hear from you – email us on gavin.freeguard@mediastandardstrust.org or follow us on Twitter. And you can subscribe to this newsletter via email.

Orwell Prize 2011 winners announced

The winners of the Orwell Prize 2011, Britain’s most prestigious prize for political writing, were announced tonight, Tuesday 17th May 2011, from 7pm at a ceremony at Church House, Westminster.

Book Prize

Tom Bingham’s The Rule of Law (Penguin) was the unanimous choice of the Book Prize judges. The book sets out to examine the oft-used but little scrutinised phrase, tracing its historical origins, setting out eight conditions which capture its essence and looking at its relationship with sovereignty and society. According to the preface, it is not addressed to lawyers, but to those ‘who have heard references to the rule of law, who are inclined to think it sounds like a good thing rather than a bad thing, who wonder if it may not be rather important, but who are not quite sure what it is all about and would like to make up their minds.’ Tom Bingham, a former master of the rolls, lord chief justice, and senior law lord, died in September 2010. His award was presented to Lady (Elizabeth) Bingham of Cornhill. This year’s Book Prize judges were Jim Naughtie (presenter of BBC Radio 4’s Today and Bookclub programmes, former chair of the Man Booker Prize judges), Ursula Owen (founder director of Virago Press, former editor of Index on Censorship, project director of the Free Word Centre) and Will Skidelsky (books editor of The Observer). The judges said: ‘All the judges felt that The Rule of Law was a book for our times: incisive, wise and clear. It is a book that is needed, and it is thrilling to reward a book about the law that isn’t for lawyers. It addresses the questions of freedom and order that are not only at the heart of our national debate, but touch on the upheavals around the world. And freedom and order are, of course, central to Orwell’s own work.’

Journalism Prize

This year’s Journalism Prize was awarded to Jenni Russell, for columns published by the Sunday Times and The Guardian. Russell’s winning selection included commentary and analysis on centralisation and control, class, Clegg, Brown’s bullying, prostitution and the lonely and disabled, and a call to tax those with free university degrees. This year’s Journalism Prize judges were Martin Bright (political editor of the Jewish Chronicle, founder and chief executive of New Deal of the Mind, shortlisted for the Journalism Prize 2007) and Michela Wrong (journalist and author, previously shortlisted for the Orwell Prize for all three of her books). The judges said: ‘Jenni Russell was the stand-out journalist in an outstanding field. Her empathy for the world beyond Westminster gives her writing an extra dimension often lacking in political insiders. There is an overriding humanity to her work, whether she is covering the death-throes of the last Labour government or the birth-pangs of the Coalition.’

Blog Prize

This year’s Blog Prize judges unanimously agreed on Graeme Archer, and his posts for ConservativeHome, as this year’s winner. Archer – ‘a 41 year old, civilly-partnered vegetarian Tory who lives in Hackney & is mildly obsessed with swimming’ – is the first Blog Prize winner writing under his own name, rather than a pseudonym. His winning posts covered everything from the coalition government to the controversy over a gay couple being turned away from a B&B, via competitive sport and open primaries. This year’s Blog Prize judges were David Allen Green (shortlisted for the Blog Prize 2010 as ‘Jack of Kent’) and Gaby Hinsliff (journalist and blogger, former political editor of The Observer). The judges said: ‘Graeme Archer is a blogger with wonderful elegance and clarity. Whether he writes on party politics or just about what he sees around him in Hackney, he is sharply observant and invariably thought-provoking.  His posts are engaging or disconcerting in turns, regardless of the political views of the reader.  Graeme Archer is, in the unanimous verdict of the judges, the one blogger who did most last year to make good political blogging into an art.’

The Orwell Prize

The winners came from shortlists of 6 books, 7 journalists and 7 bloggers, which had been whittled down from longlists of 18 books, 15 journalists and 22 bloggers. This followed a record number of entries – 213 books, 87 journalists and 205 bloggers. The Book Prize, Journalism Prize and Blog Prize winners all receive £3000 prize money. All three winners were also presented with a plaque bearing Orwell’s ambition: ‘what I have most wanted to do… is to make political writing into an art.’ Unlike most literary prizes, the Orwell Prize takes writing and argument to the public throughout the year. Our next event will be at the Buxton Festival on 13th July at 10.30am. Nick Cohen (previously shortlisted for What’s Left?), Linda Grant (Orange Prize-winning novelist) and Matthew Parris (winner of the Orwell Prize for Journalism 2005) will answer the question, ‘is politics corrupted by corrupted language?’, marking the 65th anniversary of Orwell’s ‘Politics and the English Language’. ENDS Notes to editors 1. The Orwell Prize is Britain’s most prestigious prize for political writing. Every year, prizes are awarded to the work – for the book, for the journalism and for the blog – which comes closest to George Orwell’s ambition ‘to make political writing into an art’. Each Prize is worth £3000. 2. The Prize was founded by the late Professor Sir Bernard Crick in its present form in 1993, awarding its first prizes in 1994. The Media Standards Trust, Political Quarterly and Orwell Trust are partners in running the Prize, through the Council of the Orwell Prize. Richard Blair (Orwell’s son), A. M. Heath and Thomson Reuters are sponsors. 3. For further information, please contact the Deputy Director, Gavin Freeguard, at gavin.freeguard@mediastandardstrust.org, or on 0207 229 5722.

Orwell Prize 2011 Shortlists Announced

  • 6 books, 7 journalists and 7 bloggers remain in contention for £3000 prizes
  • Winners to be announced on 17th May
  • Shortlists revealed at debate, ‘is it time to make monarchy history?’

The shortlists for this year’s Orwell Prize, Britain’s most prestigious prize for political writing, have been announced today, Tuesday 26th April, at Thomson Reuters, Canary Wharf. The shortlist announcements (from 7pm) were followed by the annual shortlist debate, this time on the question ‘is it time to make monarchy history?’. The debate featured Peter Hitchens (winner of the Orwell Prize for Journalism 2010), Sunder Katwala (general secretary of the Fabian Society, longlisted for the Blog Prize 2011), Iain McLean (professor of politics, University of Oxford), Joan Smith (journalist, author and supporter of Republic), and Gerry Stoker (professor of politics and governance, University of Southampton), chaired by Jodie Ginsberg (UK and Ireland bureau chief, Thomson Reuters). The shortlists were announced by Jean Seaton (director of the Orwell Prize).

Book Prize

A record 213 books were whittled down to a longlist of 18 and then the shortlist of 6 by this year’s judges, Jim Naughtie (presenter of BBC Radio 4’s Today and Bookclub programmes, former chair of the Man Booker Prize judges), Ursula Owen (founder director of Virago Press, former editor of Index on Censorship, project director of the Free Word Centre) and Will Skidelsky (books editor of The Observer). The shortlisted books are:

  • Bingham, Tom The Rule of Law (Allen Lane)
  • Bullough, Oliver Let Our Fame Be Great: Journeys Among the Defiant People of the Caucasus (Penguin)
  • Dunmore, Helen The Betrayal (Fig Tree)
  • Hitchens, Christopher Hitch-22 (Atlantic Books)
  • Moqadam, Afsaneh Death to the Dictator! (The Bodley Head)
  • Thorpe, D. R. Supermac: The Life of Harold MacMillan (Chatto & Windus)

Penguin takes three slots on this year’s shortlist, with Random House following closely behind with two. Atlantic’s Christopher Hitchens, author of Orwell’s Victory, is the brother of last year’s Journalism Prize winner, Peter. Helen Dunmore’s The Betrayal is the first novel on the shortlist since Marina Lewycka’s Two Caravans (2008, although Petina Gappah’s collection of short stories, An Elegy for Easterly, made last year’s list). Director of the Prize, Jean Seaton, said: ‘There is a recurrent theme in this year’s books, and it is very Orwellian: fear. For the first time we have had to seek to preserve the anonymity of an author, Afsaneh Moqadam on Iran, and from Dunmore’s gripping novel about life in Stalin’s Russia to Oliver Bullough on a previously unknown genocide, the horror of authoritarian power is displayed. ‘But there is an answering theme – from Tom Bingham’s Rule of Law which lays out (for all societies) how law not just written down but in practice preserves liberty and order, to Thorpe’s wonderfully humane biography of Macmillan, seamlessly weaving the personal and the affairs of state to Christopher Hitchens’ grand memoir, full of brilliant writing and sharp judgements brimming with a very particular life – that cherishes the individual.’

Journalism Prize

This year’s shortlist of 7 journalists (instead of the usual 6) came from the longlist of 15 journalists (up from the usual 12), out of a record field of 87 journalists. This year’s judges are Martin Bright (political editor of the Jewish Chronicle, founder and chief executive of New Deal of the Mind, shortlisted for the Journalism Prize 2007) and Michela Wrong (journalist and author, previously shortlisted for the Orwell Prize for all three of her books). The shortlisted journalists are:

  • Collins, Philip The Times
  • Gentleman, Amelia The Guardian
  • Mayer, Catherine TIME
  • Rachman, Gideon Financial Times
  • Russell, Jenni Sunday Times; The Guardian
  • Shabi, Rachel The Guardian
  • Walsh, Declan The Guardian; Granta

Amelia Gentleman is shortlisted for a second consecutive year. Shortlisted Gideon Rachman was longlisted for last year’s Blog Prize. Journalism from TIME (with Catherine Mayer), the Financial Times (with Gideon Rachman) and Granta (with Declan Walsh) is recognised on an Orwell Prize shortlist for the first time. Director of the Prize, Jean Seaton, said: ‘Wikileaks has shown how vital journalism is to creating public knowledge out of facts: and this year’s shortlist covers the strengths of modern reporting, out on the streets of Britain and the world, witnessing and telling important  stories – and then the other end, judging, provoking, thinking.’

Blog Prize

7 bloggers, rather than the usual 6, have been shortlisted for this year’s Prize. 22 bloggers (rather than the usual 12) were longlisted from a record 205 entries. This year’s judges are David Allen Green (shortlisted for the Blog Prize 2010 as ‘Jack of Kent’) and Gaby Hinsliff (journalist and blogger, former political editor of The Observer). The shortlisted bloggers are:

Paul Mason, cited in Newsnight’s Special Prize win in 2007, is shortlisted for a second time (having been previously shortlisted for the inaugural Blog Prize in 2009). The Heresiarch was previously longlisted in 2009. Director of the Prize, Jean Seaton, said: ‘Blogging is mutating faster than a fruit fly in a scientific experiment: now in its third year, the Blog Prize shows how this new vehicle for writing is both taking us into areas of private and unreported experience (like the inner life of politics in Mid-Wife Crisis), but also finding new voices, magnanimous and distinct.’ The winners of the Orwell Prizes – each worth £3000 – will be announced at an awards ceremony at Church House, Westminster, on Tuesday 17th May, 6.30 for 7pm. The Orwell Prize will also be returning to the Buxton Festival this summer as part of its programme of public events. Nick Cohen (previously shortlisted for What’s Left?), Linda Grant (Orange Prize-winning novelist) and Matthew Parris (winner of the Orwell Prize for Journalism 2005) will answer the question, ‘is politics corrupted by corrupted language?’, marking the 65th anniversary of Orwell’s ‘Politics and the English Language’. ENDS Notes to editors 1. The Orwell Prize is Britain’s most prestigious prize for political writing. Every year, prizes are awarded to the work – for the book, for the journalism and for the blog – which comes closest to George Orwell’s ambition ‘to make political writing into an art’. Each Prize is worth £3000. 2. The Prize was founded by the late Professor Sir Bernard Crick in its present form in 1993, awarding its first prizes in 1994. The Media Standards Trust, Political Quarterly and Orwell Trust are partners in running the Prize, through the Council of the Orwell Prize. Richard Blair (Orwell’s son), A. M. Heath and Thomson Reuters are sponsors. 3. For further information, please contact the Deputy Director, Gavin Freeguard, at gavin.freeguard@mediastandardstrust.org or 0207 229 5722.

Newsletter: Orwell’s notes on Wigan

If you’re enjoying our Wigan Pier diary blog, you might also want to take a look at Orwell’s notes on Wigan.
In addition to the diary, Orwell conducted a great deal of research, spending a lot of time in public libraries and writing to local officials. Orwell’s notes on Wigan combine this research with other observations from his time in Wigan, notably on housing.
And one of this week’s diary entries gives a fascinating insight into how all of this research was translated into the final book – compare Orwell’s entry of 15th February with this extract from chapter one of The Road to Wigan Pier.

The Orwell Prize 2011

This year’s Prize has received a record-breaking 213 entries for the Book Prize, 87 journalists for the Journalism Prize and 205 bloggers for the Blog Prize. To see a full list of entrants, visit our website.
The longlists will be announced on 30th March 2011.

From the archive

Orwell’s essay, ‘Decline of the English Murder’, was published 65 years ago this week, on 15th February 1946. You can now read it on our website, along with another new addition to our archive – one of Orwell’s most famous essays, ‘Politics and the English Language’.
The wartime diary over the weekend mentioned Orwell’s friend, the author Arthur Koestler. Orwell’s essay on Koestler’s work (which includes the dystopian classic, Darkness at Noon) can be found on our site.
The London Review of Books was having a great deal of fun on twitter with famous typos this week (including this one from Orwell fan, Christopher Hitchens). In his talk at the Cheltenham Festival, Peter Davison discussed some of the more entertaining (honest) Orwell production problems – including a surprising answer to a famous mathematical formula. 2+2 = [blank], anyone?

Events

We’ll be announcing some literary festival events of our own shortly, but until then, a number of previous winners will be appearing up and down the UK:
Aye Write! Glasgow
Jewish Book Week, London
Cambridge Book Festival
Qattan Foundation
Also, this year’s Political Quarterly lecture (PQ are one of our partners) will be given by David Miliband on 8 March. Visit the LSE website for more information.

The Wigan Pier Diaries

This week, entries were published on 12th, 13th, 15th, 16th, 17th and 18th February.
Next week, entries will be published on 19th, 20th, 21st and 24th February.
In addition to the blog, we have a Google Map tracking Orwell’s journey, a flickr set of archive images, and our page on The Road to Wigan Pier, with the first chapter and other links.

The Wartime Diaries

This week, entries were published on 12th February.
The next entry will be published on 1st March. If you’ve got any suggestions about our website(s), we’d love to hear from you – email us on gavin.freeguard@mediastandardstrust.org or follow us on Twitter. And you can subscribe to this newsletter via email.

Dione Venables: Orwell – Plain Speaking and Hidden Agendas

Among the biographers who have applied themselves to relating and explaining the life and times of George Orwell, who was once Eric Blair, there will be few who, having delved and dug into this short but momentous life, are capable of letting it rest there. With the richness and depth of the literature he left us, it is easy to forget that even though he lived for forty-seven years, only half that time were serious writing years. He was a straightforward man, Eric Blair, given to good manners and plain speaking. Having purged some of his own demons (Down and Out in Paris and London and Burmese Days) and then morphed into George Orwell, he went in search of other people’s devils and did his best to present them as he found them (The Road to Wigan Pier and Animal Farm). In the process maybe he came to understand himself better, as is liable to happen when any problem is deliberately examined under the public and defining microscope of the written word.

No one appears to have enjoyed this sharing of his conceptions and misconceptions more than he himself did. His novels explored aspects of contemporary 20th century life which are relevant socio-political documents today. Despite the high profile of his last two novels, his articles, reviews and essays in various journals such as Horizon and Tribune are where one might be forgiven for feeling closest to George Orwell, to his likes and dislikes, and to those subjects closest to his heart. It is the magic of constant discovery within these works that the irresistibility of the plain man’s words will quietly entwine themselves round you and ensure that you never again quite escape the fascination of interpreting and then re-interpreting George Orwell.

Were you to settle down with some of the essays (Penguin published a miscellany of over 40 of them in 2000, with an introduction by Sir Bernard Crick) the often cheerful, matter-of-fact subjects tumble onto the page, a kaleidoscope of passion and pessimism, humour and humility impossible to resist. The everyday making of a good cup of tea becomes a strangely intimate exercise and sides are taken when it is discovered that, unlike some, Orwell belongs to the brigade which puts the tea in the cup first and adds the milk afterwards. After only mentioning one quite trivial subject, there are already questions to be asked and opinions to be exchanged. That is where he grabs you because every line he writes is liable to be encrypted and contains a wealth of possibilities; the more you read and read again, the more enlightenment you find.

The same changing angles and unexpected layers of perception apply to the Orwell poems. The other day a friend and I were discussing his poem ‘Romance’ and my friend thought it showed all the bitterness and cynicism of a young man simply making use of the facilities in the Burma of 1922-27 when the British Raj did as it pleased. My interpretation was completely the reverse, for in it I saw the pleasure in the girl’s youth and beauty, his relief, after abortive efforts in England, at finally parting with his virginity, and the quirky little last line in which he laughs with wry indulgence at the girl’s awareness of her own value, knowing that they know that she will be the winner and, what’s more, that he’ll visit her again.

Romance

When I was young and had no sense,
In far off Mandalay
I lost my heart to a Burmese girl
As lovely as the day.

Her skin was gold, her hair was jet,
Her teeth were ivory;
I said “For twenty silver pieces,
Maiden, sleep with me.”

She looked at me, so pure, so sad,
The loveliest thing alive,
And in her lisping, virgin voice,
Stood out for twenty-five.

*   *   *   *   *   *   *   *   *   *

One wonders whether Orwell considered that his life was really dull and colourless because his novels seem to reflect a tired kind of depression and seediness that is not present in the essays. To be constantly short of money will make life extremely grey and ‘featureless’ because it takes a certain amount of liquidity to inject the colour of incident into each day and without it, the eking-out of meagre funds tends to make life very ‘dull’ indeed. But George had his own ways of gingering things up. To be sent off to the other side of the World for five years, having left behind The Girl Most Desired ‘with all hope denied’ (Page 154, Eric & Us) was clearly enough to start off his Burmese idyll on the wrong foot and, judging by the gloom – even the rage – with which he described those years, it appears to have introduced a sullen mood of inward despair. This youthful angst grew even darker on returning to England with his unsuccessful attempt to re-establish his boyhood romance. The disappointment of what he saw as rejection evolved into a determination to sink himself down to the bilges of life in order to allow himself the recognition that others were suffering a great deal more all around him (Down and Out in Paris & London, 1935; Burmese Days, 1936; The Road to Wigan Pier, 1937). It certainly affected, and at times depressed, the way he wrote his novels which is why the essays are such bran tubs of lucky dips and all so much more satisfying in many ways.

The interesting thing about applying oneself to debating the content of George Orwell’s work is that he quite generously expects you to disagree with him now and then. The ‘puckish’ side of his nature positively entices his reader to cross swords with such remarks as:

‘Look back through this essay, and for certain you will find that I have again and again committed the very faults I am protesting against.’
‘Politics and The English Language’, Horizon, April 1946

In occasional bullish mood he will fling out remarks to make your blood pressure rise, such as an essay called ‘The Prevention of Literature’ where Orwell deliberately provokes with:

‘Here I am not trying to deal with the familiar claim that freedom is an illusion, or with the claim that there is more freedom in totalitarian countries than in democratic ones, but with the much more tenable and dangerous proposition that freedom is undesirable and that intellectual honesty is a form of antisocial selfishness.’

Such provocation is entirely deliberate from one who likes nothing better than dropping a stone into the pond of discussion and watching the ripples as they spread across the whole surface. And yet… and yet, in another mood entirely, this plain-speaking man is riveted by small wonders. In his essay ‘Some Thoughts on The Common Toad’ (Tribune, April 1946) his perfection of the art of plain speaking cannot be bettered than in a single sentence:

‘… after his long fast, the toad has a very spiritual look, like a strict
Anglo-Catholic towards the end of Lent.’

In a line and a half you have the whole picture, complete with sly sparkle of humour and a total economy of words. Ah, that may be what he wrote but is that what he meant? The plain-speaking man has, with his lifelong habit of ‘double-speak’, planted doubt in the mind of his reader. Is anything the way it seems to be?

* * * * * * * * * *

It is extraordinary that George Orwell appears to be more often appreciated by men than women. Could this be because of that previously mentioned tendency to dusty greyness which permeates his novels and which may well appeal less to women? It would be a good subject for debate because there are to be found such riches of colour and style, intellect and humour in the essays, written in that practical, un-flowery way of his which express his genius without drama or decoration. There are also so many subtle references back to that childhood which he chose to present as having been far from happy (‘Such, Such Were The Joys’). Much has been made of this essay and its assertions over the years, but was firmly refuted by Jacintha Buddicom (Eric & Us, 1974/2006) who should know, after all, since Eric Blair spent most of them with her and her family until he went to Burma in 1922. That Orwell also, in his heart, would have agreed with her comes over quite strongly all over his work if you look for it.

There is a long, three paragraph reflection on the happiness of childhood past in an essay called ‘Riding Down To Bangor’ which he wrote for Tribune in November 1946. By then several heart-wrenching things had happened to him in that he and his wife Eileen had adopted a baby boy in wartime 1944 and, within months, Eileen had died while Orwell, by then an official War correspondent, was away in recently liberated Paris. He returned to assume fatherhood and to take care of Richard with the help of family and then a nanny. By the time he wrote ‘Riding Down to Bangor’ Richard was nearly two and Orwell was deeply involved with all things domestic, a state which he clearly thoroughly enjoyed. His own childhood may well have been in his mind when he wrote:

It is hard not to feel that it was a better kind of society than that which arose from the sudden industrialization of the later part of the century. The people… may be mildly ridiculous but they were uncorrupted. They have something that is best described as integrity, or good morale, founded partly on an unthinking piety.

George Orwell was a loving and devoted father, bringing Richard back to London to live with him as soon as he possibly could. He took his turn with the practical aspects of parenthood as well as quickly recognising how fast a child’s mind will absorb learning of every kind. Animal Farm with all its intriguing sub-texts, had been published and become a resounding success by this period, money was coming in and it was at last possible to consider the future. Despite his declining health and increasing demands by various journals which kept a regular income coming in, it was decided to lease a property in Scotland on the island of Jura so that Richard could progress in health and freedom and George could write his last, and deeply complicated novel, Nineteen Eighty Four. The fact that both ideals were achieved despite his health gradually descending into terminal illness says so much for his strength and determination. The plain-spoken man with the no-nonsense approach to his genius left behind him such a wealth of literature that it takes time and endless re-reading to recognize within the phrases the truth of who he was, and the source of where his often battered happiness lay. One of his most pared-down but revealing sentences may be considered especially illuminating. Sandwiched between a contemplation of the quality of love between children and adults, and his supposed crush on an older girl called Elsie (Mallinson?) in ‘Such, Such Were The Joys’ one discovers:

Love, the spontaneous, unqualified emotion of love, was something I could only feel for people who were young.

Given that he was recalling his early youth, and that at the time of writing this essay he was forty four, with many affairs in his life, a brief but ‘open’ marriage, and an occasional eye for the girls when opportunity knocked, one wonders whether there were, in Orwell’s short life, just two completely ‘unqualified’ and selfless loves. Consider Eric Blair’s absolute eight-year commitment to Jacintha Buddicom, and the even briefer period of complete devotion to his son Richard. Orwell’s deceptively uncluttered essays tend to raise these sort of questions to those who read them; causing repeated reads while the true message is searched for. This was, after all, the way that he and his Muse wrote to each other from their earliest youth and one wonders whether it became so ingrained in them that this was the way they continued to write for the rest of their lives.

Dione Venables runs Finlay Publisher, who publish a new essay by a leading Orwell scholar every two months. Dione contributed a revealing postscript to the 2006 edition of Jacintha Buddicom’s Eric & Us, a memoir of her childhood with her close friend, Eric Blair (later George Orwell). The three Buddicoms in Eric & Us were the children of Dione’s aunt Laura Finlay. Dione is the author of seven historical novels, and a sometime BBC broadcaster and miniaturist.

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