The Imaginaries of Nineteen Eighty-Four
from Part IV - Media
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 18 September 2020
Nineteen Eighty-Four has become part of our collective mental furniture. Its phrases structure our journalism. Its ideas inform our critiques of the present and the politics it shapes. Its future has become our past, yet its account of that future determines how we talk about the present as it continually threatens to transform into something menacing, unpredictable, and strange. This chapter reflects on the implications of what this inseparability of imagined past, increasingly fictional present, and not-yet-assured future says about our attitude to the dystopian imaginary and the place of Orwell’s novel within it. The chapter also examines why we value Nineteen Eighty-Four, sometimes unthinkingly, offering a commentary on its popularity and prestige at times of creeping authoritarian politics. It discusses the relevance of Orwell’s novel to more recent debates about post-truth politics, surveillance, with gestures to theories of simulation, culturalization, and the hyperreal.
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