Episode 1169
How did an Eton-educated imperial police officer named Eric Arthur Blair transform into the "saint of common decency" known as George Orwell? In this episode, we explore the paradoxes of the man who gave us the definitive vocabulary for totalitarianism.
Join us as we trace Orwell’s journey from his guilt-ridden service in the Indian Imperial Police in Burma to his deliberate immersion into the poverty of Paris and London. We discuss how his "watershed political experience" fighting in the Spanish Civil War—where he survived a sniper’s bullet to the throat—solidified his lifelong hatred of both fascism and Stalinism.
We also uncover the personal struggles behind his literary masterpieces, including the tragic loss of his first wife, Eileen, and his race to finish Nineteen Eighty-Four while dying of tuberculosis on a remote Scottish island. Finally, we examine how terms like "Newspeak," "doublethink," and "Cold War" cemented his legacy as one of the 20th century's most influential writers.
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Published on 2 days, 22 hours ago
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