by Alex Miller
This essay is the result of a re-reading of George Orwell’s two most
famous novels. Both Animal Farm and Nineteen Eighty-Four have acquired
the status of textbooks, and are routinely used in schools to
demonstrate to children the inherent dangers of social revolution. It
is time for a reappraisal.
The ``Centenary Edition’’ of George Orwell’s Animal Farm contains a
preface written by Orwell for the first edition (Secker and Warburg,
1945) but never published, together with a preface that he wrote
specially for a translation for displaced Ukrainians living under
British and US administration after World War II.
If we are to take Orwell at his word in the first of these prefaces,
Animal Farm is intended as a critique of the Stalinist Soviet regime
``from the left’’. He explicitly dissociates himself from conservative
critiques, which he describes as ``manifestly dishonest, out of date,
and actuated by sordid motives’’.
Full: http://links.org.au/node/379
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> This essay is the result of a re-reading of George Orwell's two most
> famous novels. Both Animal Farm and Nineteen Eighty-Four have
> acquired the status of textbooks, and are routinely used in schools
> to demonstrate to children the inherent dangers of social
> revolution. It is time for a reappraisal.
Reappraisal! How can people who write for a socialist journal have
remained ignorant for so long of the well-known fact that Orwell was a
socialist?
--
--- Joe Fineman jo...@verizon.net
||: A millihelen is the amount of facial beauty required to :||
||: launch one ship; a microhelen, to arouse one sailor. :||
> Did you actually read the article?
No.
--
--- Joe Fineman jo...@verizon.net
||: There's nothing between the North Pole and Texas but a :||
||: barbed-wire fence. :||