spiderhead t1_it8ba5n wrote
In a nutshell - It’s heavily implied that a populist working class movement was co-opted by authoritarians and The Party continues to demonize the capitalists as a political scapegoat. But there’s no concrete answer. It’s a huge source of confusion for those who think that the book is an anti-socialist manifesto.
INTHEMIDSTOFLIONS OP t1_it8dmnd wrote
Thank you!
I’ve read that We, Brave New World, and 1984 were satire parodies of the antithesis to the utopian socialist novels of the time.
spiderhead t1_it8emc5 wrote
George Orwell was highly critical of the elite socialists who spoke of progressivism but had zero interest in being around working class people, but was himself a committed socialist and anti-fascist.
But yeah, since no one is really giving you a straight answer, that’s how I always read 1984 and what I think is implied based on my understanding of Orwell’s beliefs as a person.
You should finish it tho. It’s bleak and disturbing but it’s also an incredibly prescient book that’s worth your time.
INTHEMIDSTOFLIONS OP t1_it8gx4z wrote
Thank you!
Areljak t1_it8w2vd wrote
Its pretty directly referencing Stalinism and applying it to the UK, some examples:
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2+2=5 was a stalinist propaganda slogan
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The 180° turns in foreign policy and propaganda mirror similar turns in Soviet propaganda from being anti-german then suddenly pro-german following the signing to the Molotov-Ribbentrov pact to then switching suddenly back to anti-german following the German invasion in 1941.
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The omnipresent Big Brother mirrors Stalin (although Hitler wasnot dissimilar)
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Goldstein is Trotsky
...I recommend reading 1984 and then reading Child of the Revolution by Wolfgang Loenhard, an autobiographical account from a then young German on the periphery of party politics in the Soviet Union 1938-45 (before going back to Germany to build up the GDR to be to his defection in 1949), its a long book but well worth the read.
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