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Thread: Orwell was no prophet, but an honest man

  1. #16
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    Of course Orwell is an outstanding novelist but I'm not sure how honest he was. I wouldn't call him a plagiarist, but "1984" is basing on the novel "We" written by the Russian writer Evgeny Zamyatin.

  2. #17
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    Quote Originally Posted by amarna View Post
    Of course Orwell is an outstanding novelist but I'm not sure how honest he was. I wouldn't call him a plagiarist, but "1984" is basing on the novel "We" written by the Russian writer Evgeny Zamyatin.
    Well, you accuse them all of copying Plato, if you wanted to go that way...

    Quote Originally Posted by Leonard_K View Post
    The Party is like a new better adapted species taking over its environment. It is a snake introduced to an island changing its ecology forever. Scientific Socialism was supposed to be a new better species and Orwell expresses his disillusionment about it mutating into grotesque forms like the Soviet and Nazi systems.
    Good analogy.
    Go to work, get married, have some kids, pay your taxes, pay your bills, watch your tv, follow fashion, act normal, obey the law and repeat after me: "I am free."

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    Quote Originally Posted by The Atheist View Post
    Well, you accuse them all of copying Plato, if you wanted to go that way...
    The merits of Plato seem to be much more estimated than the merits of Zamyatin: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/We_(novel)
    Last edited by amarna; 05-28-2009 at 01:49 PM.

  4. #19
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    Quote Originally Posted by amarna View Post
    The merits of Plato seem to be much more estimated than the merits of Zamyatin: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/We_(novel)
    You missed the point - nobody disputes Orwell was influenced by We - that Plato's Republic was the seed originally planted and to which all forms of utopian and dystopian writing owe their existence.
    Go to work, get married, have some kids, pay your taxes, pay your bills, watch your tv, follow fashion, act normal, obey the law and repeat after me: "I am free."

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    Quote Originally Posted by The Atheist View Post
    You missed the point - nobody disputes Orwell was influenced by We - that Plato's Republic was the seed originally planted and to which all forms of utopian and dystopian writing owe their existence.
    Don't think so - there is a difference between using the same genre and using the same plot. But anyway, Orwell made the best of it.
    Last edited by amarna; 05-28-2009 at 05:16 PM.

  6. #21
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    Quote Originally Posted by amarna View Post
    Don't think so - there is a difference between using the same genre and using the same plot. But anyway, Orwell made the best of it.
    Given that there has to be an intense similarity in all dystopian novels, 1984 is derivative from We, but they are hardly the same plot. I'd class Brave New World as closer to plagiarism than 1984.

    Which one made the best of it and which is more important in literary and socio-political history isn't in doubt.
    Go to work, get married, have some kids, pay your taxes, pay your bills, watch your tv, follow fashion, act normal, obey the law and repeat after me: "I am free."

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    Apart from literary influences novels of that genre may be similar because there are not many possibilities to vary the political conception of a system too. As to utopies, most of them - the Biblic paradise, the land of the Phaiakes in the Odyssey, Campanellas City of Sun, Thomas Morus' Utopia - are similar like peas in a pot. (By the way there are several antique utopies wich are not referring to Platon) The topic itself sugests this similarity, I think. The dystopic systems are imho much more interesting, but finally the possiblities to embellish a hierchical society and the mechanisms of maintaining power are limited.

    (Sorry for my uneloquent English, it isn't my native tongue).
    Last edited by amarna; 05-28-2009 at 06:23 PM.

  8. #23
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    Quote Originally Posted by amarna View Post
    Apart from literary influences novels of that genre may be similar because there are not many possibilities to vary the political conception of a system too. As to utopies, most of them - the Biblic paradise, the land of the Phaiakes in the Odyssey, Campanellas City of sun, Thomas Morus' Utopia - are similar like peas in a pot. The topic itself sugests this similarity, I think. The dystopic systems are imho much more interesting, but finally the possiblities to embellish a hierchical society and the mechanisms of maintaining power are limited.

    (Sorry for my uneloquent English, it isn't my native tongue).
    Well put, and don't apologise for your English - I can guarantee it's a hell of a lot better than my ability in whatever your own language is!

    Go to work, get married, have some kids, pay your taxes, pay your bills, watch your tv, follow fashion, act normal, obey the law and repeat after me: "I am free."

    Anon

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    Quote Originally Posted by The Atheist View Post
    Well put

    Rats. Come on, disagree.


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    I don't agree that 1984 is not a prophecy. We are just lucky it had not come true. I think the main message of this book (which I think eludes many readers) is that the world it describes is totally possible. Not only that, it is inherently stable -- once the whole world will become a collection of totalitatrina states, there will be no way out. In a way, a totalitarian regime is more stable than any democracy.

    People often get confused by the fact that totalitarian regimes have a hard time coexisting with democracies. But even in this scenario such a regime can only collapse if the ruling elite will become dissatisfied with it. But any revolt from below is simply impossible, and that is the essence of any totalitarian state.

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    Quote Originally Posted by Leonard_K View Post
    Gladys: ... technical competance of the powerful elite. Thank's for asking.

    I think it is not plausible. Any kind of society; its economy, resulting from the independent decisions of hundreds of millions of people cannot be controlled. That's also the flaw in socialism. Its a criticism, not very well known but exposed by F.A. Hayek and others, that a society is a rational system but not knowable in any practical sense.
    I disagree -- such a system is completely plausible. Granted (as Hayek and others pointed out) that it won't be nearly as productive as a free society. The living standards will be poor. But with XX century technology it will be productive enough to prevent a collapse from an uncontrolled starvation (local starvation does not threaten the survival of such a state). The very basic needs will be satisfied and if there is no competition from democratic neighbors, then it will survive forever.

    Actually, even the existence of such competition is not enough to bring down a totalitarian state. E.g. North Korea can remain a totalitarian state forever (short of a war).

  12. #27
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    Quote Originally Posted by one_droid View Post
    I think the main message of this book (which I think eludes many readers) is that the world it describes is totally possible.
    Although the detailed scenario of 1984 is 'totally possible', it is just one of a myriad of negative outcomes, and so, very unlikely.

    Orwell wrote satire and his intended prophecy is limited to predicting the rise in spin, political exploitation and corruption, invasion of privacy, political correctness, reality TV, and devious advertising in the decades following WW II. All of these manipulations flow from foreseeable advances in electronics.

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    Quote Originally Posted by Gladys View Post
    Although the detailed scenario of 1984 is 'totally possible', it is just one of a myriad of negative outcomes, and so, very unlikely.
    I don't know, how unlikely was Hitler's coming to power? Or communists taking over Russia? Probably not "very" unlikely since it did happen.

    And the point of the book is that once it happened everywhere, there is no turning back.

  14. #29
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    Quote Originally Posted by one_droid View Post
    ...how unlikely was Hitler's coming to power? Or communists taking over Russia?
    These are but two 'of a myriad of negative outcomes'. While neither has much in common with Oceania in 1984, both are flawed examples of the totalitarian control perfected in Ingsoc.

    Orwell may well have feared that Western democracy would evolve into something closer to Ingsoc, at least, in philosophy. Perhaps it has?

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    Quote Originally Posted by Gladys View Post
    These are but two 'of a myriad of negative outcomes'. While neither has much in common with Oceania in 1984, both are flawed examples of the totalitarian control perfected in Ingsoc.
    Nothing is perfect and neither Nazi Germany nor USSR were perfect totalitarian states. However, this is completely beside the point. Which is that they both were good enough to let the ruling elite keeping their hold on power indefinitelly. That is a definition of a totalitarian state in my view, not the details on how the total control is achieved.

    And no, I don't think the Western democracies evolve in that direction. I.e. using the state to suppress an opposition to those in power is considered to be completely unacceptable -- even more so now than decades ago.

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