Meet the Other Phone. Child-safe in minutes.

Meet the Other Phone.
Child-safe in minutes.

Buy now

Please or to access all these features

Feminism: Sex and gender discussions

1984 - George Orwell

203 replies

HuckfromScandal · 18/06/2020 10:33

Quote from 1984

“Every statue and street building has been renamed, every date has been altered.....history has stopped. Nothing exists except the endless present in which the party is always right.”

Would quite like a thread of quotes that sum up life in 2020 based on George Orwell’s 1984.

Please add the ones that resonate with you.

OP posts:
Thread gallery
7
ValancyRedfern · 18/06/2020 18:27

Hannah Arendts is also someone I find myself quoting a lot these days.

Maplecat · 18/06/2020 18:32

@Gasp0deTheW0nderD0g

I think that's a bit unfair to Winston. He doesn't say 'Do it to Julia' because Julia is a woman. He says it because he wants the torture to stop and Julia is the only other person he knows is there. I have no doubt she was saying similar.

I found 1984 absolutely terrifying when I read it in my mid-teens, because of the idea of controlling thought by controlling language. Little did I think I would live to see a time when it would have taken root in my own country.

This is a chilling bit.

***
'Thoughtcrime is a dreadful thing, old man,' he said sententiously. 'It's insidious. It can get hold of you without your even knowing it. Do you know how it got hold of me? In my sleep! Yes, that's a fact. There I was, working away, trying to do my bit--never knew I had any bad stuff in my mind at all. And then I started talking in my sleep. Do you know what they heard me saying?'

He sank his voice, like someone who is obliged for medical reasons to utter an obscenity.

'"Down with Big Brother!" Yes, I said that! Said it over and over again,
it seems. Between you and me, old man, I'm glad they got me before it went any further. Do you know what I'm going to say to them when I go up before the tribunal? "Thank you," I'm going to say, "thank you for saving me before it was too late."'

'Who denounced you?' said Winston.

'It was my little daughter,' said Parsons with a sort of doleful pride.
'She listened at the keyhole. Heard what I was saying, and nipped off to the patrols the very next day. Pretty smart for a nipper of seven, eh?
I don't bear her any grudge for it. In fact I'm proud of her. It shows I
brought her up in the right spirit, anyway.'

Chilling indeed - it sounds almost verbatim what the 'woke' crowd do if someone calls them out for wrongthink - profuse apologies, "thank you for educating me" etc.

I haven't read 1984 in a long time, but it's always stuck with me as a warning and by God is it warning me now!

ValancyRedfern · 18/06/2020 18:39

'The moment we no longer have a free press, anything can happen. What makes it possible for a totalitarian or any other dictatorship to rule is that people are not informed; how can you have an opinion if you are not informed? If everybody always lies to you, the consequence is not that you believe the lies, but rather that nobody believes anything any longer. This is because lies, by their very nature, have to be changed, and a lying government has constantly to rewrite its own history. On the receiving end you get not only one lie — a lie which you could go on for the rest of your days — but you get a great number of lies, depending on how the political wind blows. And a people that no longer can believe anything cannot make up its mind. It is deprived not only of its capacity to act but also of its capacity to think and to judge. And with such a people you can then do what you please.' Hannah Arendts.

Goosefoot · 18/06/2020 19:18

Slight sidestep from the topic, but Trump reinventing the truth about what he said about COVID, with advisers forced to toe the line, makes me think of Squealer up a ladder in the night, rewriting the commandments on the barn wall.

I feel like this goes on all the time now. The rules are changed, the facts are changed, and it's like we aren't supposed to point it out.

samyeagar · 18/06/2020 19:28

@Goosefoot

Slight sidestep from the topic, but Trump reinventing the truth about what he said about COVID, with advisers forced to toe the line, makes me think of Squealer up a ladder in the night, rewriting the commandments on the barn wall.

I feel like this goes on all the time now. The rules are changed, the facts are changed, and it's like we aren't supposed to point it out.

The rules have indeed changed. Up until the past decade, it was mass communication FOR the masses, now it is mass communication BY the masses.

The explosion of the internet paired with the smart phone has put humanity in a position it has never been in before. There are no longer any barriers to communication. Things that for all of humanity until the past decade that served as natural barriers, and natural tempers, Time, distance, and physical barriers no longer exist.

HuckfromScandal · 18/06/2020 20:34

Well I am so glad I started this, the tangents and derailments are all very welcome and informative and educational.

I think I may reread all his books again, but tonight I think I shall watch animal farm.

Thank you ladies, I am so proud to be a FWR poster.

OP posts:
SerenityNowwwww · 18/06/2020 21:55

I’ve just downloaded 1984 on my sparkly new Scribd account (suck it Audible). I haven’t read or for years! DS loves Orwell.

terryleather · 18/06/2020 22:17

Ninkanink

Unfortunately I can't claim credit for it...maybe someone here knows who made it?

R0wantrees · 18/06/2020 22:27

My primary school teacher read 'Animal Farm' to us in our final year. Without the political meaning it is still a very powerful demonstration of human behaviour & power dynamics.
I'm very grateful to her for that exposure & opportunity to consider its meanings without the pressures of completing assignments, essays or passing exams.

ALittleBitofVitriol · 18/06/2020 22:31

My teens are currently studying 1984 with some friends, they are all loving it!

You can read all of orwell's stuff for free here:
www.george-orwell.org/

TheSandman · 18/06/2020 22:36

I think it's endlessly ironic that the very title of the book has been rewritten.

It was originally 'Nineteen Eighty-Four: a Novel by George Orwell'. These days it's '1984 by George Orwell'. (In a few years I suspect the marketing guys will give it a workover and it's be 'Disney's Harry Potter and the Ministry of Fear by Allan Dean Foster'.)

StrawberryJam200 · 18/06/2020 22:50

Thanks for this thread. I always thought 1984 so depressing and scary. I studied it for O level in .....1984. The essay questions were all about the extent to which Orwell's "story" had come true. Little did any of us know what the future held!

I prefer Down and Out in Paris and London, etc.

Freespeecher · 18/06/2020 22:52

I remember Adrian Mole (who saw himself as an intellectual) being heartbroken as he'd though Animal Farm was just a book about pigs.

I miss Sue Townsend.

transdimensional · 18/06/2020 22:54

TheSandman I think it's always been called "1984" in the United States. I was aware that it's meant to be "Nineteen Eighty-Four" in this country (though I'd forgotten the "A Novel" subtitle) but I wrote "1984" anyway because I was feeling lazy.
And the first of the Harry Potter books likewise has a different title in the US!

RedToothBrush · 19/06/2020 00:15

There was an episode of Star Trek TNG strongly influenced by 1984. The one where Picard is tortured to make him say there are 5 lights but there are only 4.

Star trek is hugely underrated in its exploration of the dilemmas and ethical and moral difficulties of the principles of liberalism. It was of its time when these debates and discussions were at their peak.

The new amazon prime series Picard is another look at the same thing but its placed inside a world which reflects the growing shadow of authoritarianism.

If you understand the principles of liberalism (and I don't mean Liberal identity) and how it's about balancing the needs of different groups and promoting human rights, the entire star trek franchise is fascinating from a political view point. Its lacking the refinement of 1984 but its still echoing it.

It was not just another scifi programme with dodgy aliens and phasers.

Sadly George Takei is merely another Daniel Radcliffe or Emma Watson.

TheSandman · 19/06/2020 13:55

Star trek is hugely underrated in its exploration of the dilemmas and ethical and moral difficulties of the principles of liberalism. It was of its time when these debates and discussions were at their peak.

All semi-decent Science Fiction does this. Star Trek was pretty simplistic. (I'm currently working my way through the original series with my 11 year old son. We're nearly up to the episode where The Riddler is painted black and white down the middle as a metaphor for racial intolerance - he's being endlessly hunted by someone who is painted white and black who considers him inferior. 'Black and white' vs 'white and black' - geddit? Not exactly subtle stuff.)

Though it was ground-breaking in its multi-ethnicity and it's attempts to suggest that a One World Government, communism and atheism weren't exactly EVIL - it still wallowed in mawkish interventionist Americanism.

George Takei is a treasure.

WellThankyouAJPTaylor · 19/06/2020 19:44

The lights episode is great, though

I sometimes put it on when Im channel-hopping. My kids usually don't pay much attention, but when that episode was on I noticed they'd both stopped what they were doing and were watching intently.

Led to an interesting chat afterwards with DS (11) about why the Cardassian wanted Picard to say there were five, and why Picard refused. Great stuff

WellThankyouAJPTaylor · 19/06/2020 19:47

And because of this thread, I've ordered a copy of Nineteen Eighty-Four to reread. I read it as a teen, and while I understood the horror of Thoughtcrime and so on, I don't think I really got the horror of Newspeak - its implications.

Really looking forward to reading again.

Childrenofthestones · 19/06/2020 20:23

"The end" Sad.

HandsOffMyRights · 19/06/2020 20:28

Recently re-read Animal Farm and that never loses its relevance or impact.

I want to order 1984 but Audible still hasn't confirmed if they support women or not.

I watched the John Hurt film a year or so ago, but want to read the original and best, the novel.

KayakingOnDown · 19/06/2020 21:06

Thanks for this thread. I think about 1984 very often and how prophetic it was and so much of it has come true.

The Telescreen - spying on Winston at home. (Amazon Alexa, Google/ mobile phones listening to our conversations)

Hidden cameras everywhere - (CCTV and human facial recognition technology).

Re-writing history - literally Winston's job. (photoshopping, deleting Tweets, re-naming companies, editing out stuff)

The dismissive and superior attitude to the 'proles' (aka traditional working class)

Denouncing people. Being forced to say what you don't believe. Expressing your own thoughts in a diary being a rebellious act in case someone finds it.

Even Joe Wicks and the millions watching him made me think of Winston's morning workout in front of the Telescreen.

Thelnebriati · 19/06/2020 23:24

If you could pick one pivotal quote from 1984 it would be "Do it to Julia". It is the moment that Winston loses his self and all hope along with it.

The Party understand that to truly control a population, you have to break down not just the culture but also the individual; replace language to control the way people think, place them under surveillance, keep them afraid of being denounced; and so destroy the bonds of loyalty, trust and love between friends, men and women, parents and children.

Winston is an idealist. He thinks that he can confess his crimes but keep his real beliefs a secret. He says;
"I don’t mean confessing. Confession is not betrayal. What you say or do doesn't matter; only feelings matter. If they could make me stop loving you - that would be the real betrayal.”

But O'Brien already know this, he understands that he hasn't broken Winston until he has driven him to betray Julia.
As for the reason why,
''If you want a vision of the future, imagine a boot stamping on a human face - forever.''

Goosefoot · 20/06/2020 02:32

An important difference between our situation and 1984 is that in this case it's not really the state driving things, I think. Who is Big Brother? Amazon and Alexa aren't state mandated, we but them from private companies to put in our homes because we want them. Mostly we want them to do stupid things we could do just as well ourselves.

That's part of the problem, at least if it was the state you could try and stand against it.

KayakingOnDown · 20/06/2020 09:07

Alexa, Google and Twitter etc are not state-run, but they are the technology that Orwell imagined, that didn't exist when he wrote and now do.

Facebook is already developing a programme that reads minds. Artificial intelligence is being developed and improved all the time.

They are the technology that could be taken over by the state and seamlessly create the world of 1984.

Already these companies are practising censorship.

They're not state-owned here but they (or their equivalents) are in China, which is much closer to 1984 than we are in the west.

Deliriumoftheendless · 20/06/2020 09:13

There’s a lot of Rollerball that’s to do with corporations, but I haven’t watched it in so many years but it’s got me thinking.