PDA

View Full Version : Any relevance?



Blasphemy
11-19-2009, 08:23 PM
Does the number 101 of room 101 have any significance to anything else in the book? Or is it maybe just the number Orwell felt like using? Could it have something to do with a specific event or date in Orwell's life?

Maybe I'm just overthinking this. But just curious.

Geesta
11-19-2009, 10:09 PM
I think that this number has no significance,. The only thing I could think of was, that maybe it is just an easy number to say. :)

The Atheist
11-19-2009, 10:48 PM
Nice symmetrical number. I don't think it signifies anything.

jocky
11-19-2009, 11:15 PM
Does the number 101 of room 101 have any significance to anything else in the book? Or is it maybe just the number Orwell felt like using? Could it have something to do with a specific event or date in Orwell's life?

Maybe I'm just overthinking this. But just curious.

That is an exceptional observation. It is a bit like 221B Baker Street. Whether Orwell or Doyle realised the impact there imagination would have on readers is debatable but you are defenitely asking the right questions. Curiosity never killed the cat. Well done.

mollie
11-21-2009, 09:05 AM
Was 101 not the number of his office at the BBC's Broadcasting House? Or is that story apocryphal?

ETA - that is a good question!

Lokasenna
11-21-2009, 09:44 AM
Mollie is right - it was his office in Broadcasting House, a job he apparently detested.

Tag
12-05-2009, 06:24 PM
I've always considered it simply as re-education, like a remedial class or in history 101 or math 101, the beginning. This room was the beginning of re-education. The beginning of the end for all who entered.

OrphanPip
12-05-2009, 07:04 PM
I've always considered it simply as re-education, like a remedial class or in history 101 or math 101, the beginning. This room was the beginning of re-education. The beginning of the end for all who entered.

I believe 101 only has that connotation in Canada and the USA, I don't think they use it that way in the UK.