Sunday, March 3, 2019

A Collection of Essays by George Orwell

pho noneraph record Review pic judges of Or hearty pic George Orwell (1903 1950) pic Edited by M. G. Nayar Review done by pic Fahimuddin Shaikh Roll no. 44 R. H. Patel side of meat Medium B. Ed. College Kadi Sarva VishwaVidyalaya Campus, Sector 23, Gandhinagar. Year 2007-2008 Introduction 1) The Aims of Book survey The prevail-review is appreciating, analyzing and criticizing a earmark wherein the reviewer goes through the contain comprehensively to come emerge with his own motifs slightly the rule leger and its value in terms of its inner(a) and external features i. e. he content, slip-matter, theme, langu perk up on with, tar hold out appropriateness, impact upon the readers, the ability of the inditer to find his conceits and purpose behind his work as well as the composing, binding, price, size and act uponer(a) physical features of the moderate. 2) Objectives of Book review 1. The students develop composing accomplishment by preparing nones. 2. The students develop interest in reading. 3. The students develop the reading skill. 4. The students get ahead the hobby to develop the attitude of reading. 5. The students organize their thoughts. 6. The students get to know the personality of the book. 3) Importance of Book review It enriches the knowledge. It enriches the linguistic communication. It improves the skill of reading, writing and presentation. It develops the thinking ability. (4 ) Advantages of Book review As B. Ed. is a new field for teacher-trainees to get inform with confused types of books, the book-review enables them to acquire necessary skills of reading, writing, appreciating, criticizing and presentation. (5) Title of the book The title of the book selected for the book-review is samples of Orwell edited by M. G. Nayar. (6) The aims of selecting a particular book Selection of a particular book depends upon the engineer aim and the interest of the reviewer.The reviewer hatful review the book which h e liked the to the highest degree heeding the content or idea of the book. Or he can review a book to hold dear a particular work of art or literature or some useful information given in the book. I live with selected Essays of Orwell which is a compilation of shows create verb tout ensembley by George Orwell (1903-1950) in a truly simple and lucid language. The aim of my selecting the Essays of Orwell for the book-review is that the antecedent sh atomic number 18s his genuine-life experiences written with great enthusiasm and with the purpose of exposing, ridiculing and reforming the evils that prevailed in his age.Also the quizs brings out the authors uncomparable wide range of taste and guardianships like social, cultural literary, policy-making and autobiographical. orthogonal features of the book 1) Name of the book The nominate of the book selected for the book-review is Essays of Orwell and is edited by M. G. Nayar. 2) Name and detail of the author The aut hor of the book is George Orwell, one of the most prominent essayists of the 20th century. Eric Arthur Blair, who afterwards became famous as George Orwell, was born at Motihari in Bengal where his father Richard Blair was diligent in the Customs and Excise plane section of the Government of India. pic Orwell was sent to England at a very early age and he saw very little of his father till he returned to England on his retirement. His early years were very unhappy he was solitary and had few playmates or companions. He had two sisters, a father and a mother all of whom were no closer to him. They were poor and the family depended solely on Mr. Blairs small pension which was b bely enough to keep up appearances. They be an exclusive preparatory school in the south coast, which was brisk to take the promising boy at a concessional rate in the expectation that he would win a scholarship and bring identification to the school.The lonely and sensitive boy had a very unhappy age in this school run by a snobbish c given(predicate)ain and his equally snobbish wife. They never missed any opportunity to remind him that his pargonnts were poor and that he was there through their charity. Orwell gives a vivid commentary of his school (under the fictional name Crossgates) and his sufferings there in his long essay satirically titled Such, Such were the Days. He tells us I had no money, I was weak, I was ugly, I was un hot, I had a inveterate cough, I was cowardly, I smelt.. The humiliations inflicted on the sensitive and self-conscious boy in his wretched school by his bullying classmates as well as by those in authority left a dusky scar on his soul. But from his childhood he had do up his mind to become a make unnecessaryr. He writes in his Why I Write, From the very early age, perhaps the age of five or six, I knew that when I grew up I should be a writer. betwixt the ages of about seventeen and twenty-four I tried to abandon this idea, save I did so w ith the consciousness that I was outraging my true nature and that sort of or later I should welcome to settle down and write books. Writing would excessively enable him to answer two compelling ask of his nature, namely, to fight against injustice and oppression in all its forms, and to take upon himself the sins of the macrocosm and ask atonement. Orwell essays show his deep concern with contemporary reality and its consciousness of its sordid aspects. In other words we may say that its a fruit of his endeavour to remove various evils to reform the world around him so as to make it a better point to live in. Apart from essay Orwell is also known for his novels.Orwell shot into world-wide fame with the way out in 1945 of Animal Farm, a brilliant Swiftian satire on Russian Stalinism, authoritarian presidential term and human fallibility and brutality. One of his most popular novels is 1984 which presents a striking spectacle of totalisticism in action. 3) Name of the Publ isher and variation The book is published by Macmillan India Limited and edited by M. G. Nayar. It was commencement ceremony published in the year 1980 and it has been reprinted in 1981, 1986 and 1994. 4) Cover page and tail page The cover page is green-coloured thick paper with its title Essays of ORWELL printed upon it internal a hexagonal white b regulate. At the top is written the name of the publisher and at the bottom is the name of the editor. The back page is a plain white thick paper with the name of the publisher written on it. 5) Price of the book The price of the book is Rs. 28. 00 6) No. of pages and no. of chapters The book runs into 159 pages along with 11 pages of introduction at the beginning. The book consists of 12 essays on different subjects. 7) Binding of the book The book is loosely point of accumulation with gum.The cover page is not safe enough to hold the pages of the book with the gum. 8) Fonts shapes and size, printing size of the book The fon ts of the book atomic number 18 readable and have appropriate size. Proper line-spacing is given between the lines for a comfortable reading. The book is a pocket-size one and easy to carry. internal features of the book (a)Theme of the book The theme of the book Essays of Orwell is promoting the moralistic responsibilities among lot. Orwell feels disgusted with the happy dis unsophisticatedy and moral depravity of his times and feels regret over the loss of sound values.He force backs against the various ills of his age, like injustice, inequality and loss of individual freedom. The theme of the book revolves round the idea to reform the people by inculcating the ideas of decency, integrity and intelligent liberty. b) Chapterisation The book consists of 12 essays each of which are interesting and poised with the authors qualitative analysis of the situations of the new world order. The central idea of some of the important essays are as follows Essay I. Reflections on Gan dhi George Orwell showers praises on Mahatma Gandhiji referring to his autobiography The Story of My Experiments with Truth.The essay enables to see how the Western positivist views the life an doctrines of the Mahatma whose life the author considers as a sort of journey in which all act was significant. Even though he fought against the proper(a) on British Empire through the principle of non-violence the British officials who spoke of him with a mixture of amusement and disapproval also genuinely liked and admire him. Orwell stating Gandhis qualities says, Nobody ever suggested that he was corrupt, or ambitious in any vulgar way, or that anything he did was actuated by business concern or malice. He further says, His character was an extraordinarily assorted one, barely there was almost nothing in it that you can put your thumb on and call bad, and I believe that even Gandhis whip enemies would admit that he was an interesting and un jointplace man who enriched the world hardly by being alive. While admiring Gandhijis uncommon physical courage, his incorruptibility and political integrity, Orwell finds in the high moral values held scared by Gandhiji, especially in the doctrine of non-attachment, a vein of anti-humanism a quality which deliriouse him to a greater extent saintly than human.Orwell ends the essay by the remark, .. scarcely regarded simply as a politician, and compared with the other leading political figures of our time, how clean a reek he has managed to leave behind. Essay II. Shooting an Elephant This essay enables us to get a glimpse of the authors experiences in Burma where he was employed in the British Imperial Police (1922-1927). Orwell had already come to regard imperialism as very largely a racket. And he knew he was ill fitted for the role he was called upon to play. During this period of Imperial service a sense of guilt continually haunted him.While secretly he condemned imperialism as an evil, he was embittered b y the anti-European sentiment among the natives who hated him as a representative of British Imperialism. The incident described here brought home to him the dictatorship that imperialism imposes on the swayer as well as the ruled. It was as he marched at the head of an expectant crowd, rifle in hand, to shoot the mad elephant, that the irony of his own position struck him. He instinctively recoiled from the cataclysmal act to which he had committed himself, and, should he fail to carry it out, he knew he would be ridiculed by the crowd that followed him.It was therefore imperative that he should impress them in order to be considered firm, fearless, imperturbable and capable of climb to the occasion in a crisis. Torn between the immediate need to play the Sahib and his own ingrained aversion to the role thrust upon him, he set about the task of shooting the elephant, though it had never been his intention to kill the animal. Finding himself thus caught between two tyrannies th e tyranny of the ruler and the tyranny of the ruled that seemed to push him to and fro as if he were an absurd wight he realized the futility of Imperialism that deprives the tyrant himself of his free leave behind.Essay III. You and the Atom washout This essay was first published in the Tribune (19 October 1945). present Orwell discusses the effect of the former that a sophisticated weapon is likely to bestow on the substantial and affluent nations and the consequent threat to the freedom of the weaker ones. The more complex and high-priced a weapon is, the more are the chances of its becoming the monopoly of the state and the more likely it is to keep its people under subjection. In the past, as the major weapons were accessible to the people, they could rise in revolt against despotic governments.But the atomic bomb, being expensive and difficult to manufacture, will ever remain a rare weapon under state control and any revolt of the exploited classes will be rendered more and more difficult in future. And if the number of states possessing the bomb increases, it is unlikely that they will use it against one another, but they will tend to be despotic within and aggressive without, and as a result the poorer nations which cannot afford to make it will always be in danger of losing their freedom.In these circumstances, a reimposition of slavery like that of antique Rome and Greece is a mishap that cannot be wholly ruled out. Essay IV. How the Poor Die This is a chapter from the authors days of motivation and vagrancy in Paris. Here, Orwell tells us of his experience in a French infirmary where he was treated for pneumonia in 1929. From his own bed in the sloppy public ward of Hospital X in Paris, he could think of everything that went on around him with a gently critical eye. The poor died of affection and neglect, getting very little by way of real health check aid or human sympathy.The account we ger of the patients, doctors, nurses, and o f the whole sordid standard pressure of the ward reads almost like the pages of a novel. The primitive conditions of the hospital harden indifference of the doctors and nurses who regarded the patients as nothing more than specimen reminded him which apply to be houses of torture rather than centres of healing. The entire picture is painted with a sure degree of detachment, devoid of any cynicism or sentimentality, but marked by a fine sense of humour. Essay V. New WordsIn this essay (1940), Orwell dwells on the need to coin new words to hap certain feelings that are too subtle for expression. He feels that there is a considerable province of human experience that lies beyond the descriptive king of words, especially aesthetic and moral feeling, our likes and dislikes and all that concerns our inner life. Orwell here discusses the possibility of bridging these gaps in language by inventing new words. He refers to certain methods, by which words may be coined, the source of m ethods like analogy, onomatopoeia and slang.Orwell hopes that large numbers game of people apply themselves to the task of inventing new words on the introduction of common experience so that we world be able to outdo the verbal inadequacy and give an objective existence to our thoughts. Essay VI. Propaganda and Demotic Speech The paradox about modern propaganda is its unintelligibility and its consequent ill fortune to impress the audience it is aimed at. According to Orwell, this is due to the fact that the language used for the purpose has nothing to do with thelanguage of the common man.There is, in every language, a lot of difference between its written and spoken forms, but in English this difference is so glaring that the bookish language of Government leaflets or party pamphlets very often fails to get across, and succeeds at best only in creating vague and sometimes, erroneous impressions on the frequent man. Eminent writers like Harold Laski also are guilty of this s in. Orwell says that, in order to appeal to the ordinary man, neither high-sounding words nor the amend show which is viewed suspiciously by the working classes as an upper-class affectation, will attend as a vehicle of communication.The language of propaganda, to be effective, must be brought closer to the language of the common man. A truly democratic government that needs to educate the public on matters of national interest will necessarily have to choose the right words and adopt the right tone the vocabulary and tone of a genuinely demotic speech. Essay VII. The Writing of History Orwell in his essay discusses the question of objectivity in the writing of history. It often happens that some of the facts of history get so mixed up with falsehood as to become identical from lies.Orwell cites certain confirmable facts of recent history which have, within a brief period of time, undergone much(prenominal) distortion. Truth, which is of paramount importance in the recording of events, seems to be at the clemency of force and the modern tendency to tamper with truth is likely to make the task of the future historian complex as well as difficult. Essay VIII. Bookish Memories After his return to England from Paris, before he could overhear enough to live on his writings, in the early thirties, Orwell worked as a part-time assistant in a London bookshop, where he worked for about a year.Though it was drudgery for him, he had opportunities of observing customers of various kinds, including eccentrics, their habits and tastes. Here he records his impressions of such people with a half-humorous, half-indulgent attitude which, incidentally, enables us to get a glimpse into his own tastes and habits of reading. The essay reveals one curious look that Orwell lost his love of books. The changing literary tastes of the reading public are also brought out. Essay IX. The English Character In this essay Orwell perceptively analyzes the general characteristics of the English people with a remarkable degree of objectivity. The usual generalizations about the English character are vitiated by pre-conceived notions of the British aristocracy that is often drawn upon to typify the national image. Orwell draws our attention to the thus cold ignored mass the English commoners whose exclusion from the picture has so far tended to perpetuate misleading notions about the race as a whole. The racial characteristics described like artistic insensibility, xenophobia, snobbery and hypocrisy are common to the entire race.The picture that emerges is no idealized image but a true one, as sharp and well defined as the construction in an undistorting mirror held up before English humanity as a whole, apt to jolt them out of their complacency rather than embrace their national pride. Essay X. The Moral Outlook of the English People In this essay Orwell draws our attention to the moral sense of the English people. While the majority of the English pe ople are indifferent to organized religion, some of the honest aspects of Christianity do appeal to them heretofore.In this age of world-beater-politics, they cling to the belief that might is not right a truly Christian principle, though it is not one among the Biblical doctrines. That England has always supported the cause of the weak against the strong even when it was disadvantageous to them shows that the English do not subscribe to the power cult. They are neither prudish nor lax about matters of sex, gambling and drinking. military unit of any sort is repellent to the English. They have an ingrained respect for the faithfulness and human liberty. The vaunted freedom of the press in England may largely be an illusion, but freedom of speech is a reality.The English people are never afraid to give expression to their opinions in public, but hence they are never fanatic because they lack conviction, and being a phlegmatic race they are not easily roused to action. Essay XI . The English crime syndicate System Class distinctions are a vestige of the past still clinging to English society. The aristocracy of the feudal age was replaced by the nobility of the later periods, and the titled class today commands a certain respect, probably because of its traditional integrity, though its importance has been steadily dwindling with the rise of the rich nerve center class.By adopting the habits and manners of the nobility, the rich middle class tends to become indistinguishable from the upper class. At the lower level, despite the antagonism in the political field, the working classes which are not entirely free from snobbishness analyze to imitate the middle class in speech, manners and dress. There is also a large section of classless people the technically educated persons. Thus both at the top and the bottom, a sort of levelling cultivate has been at work.On the whole, the general trend seems to be towards the blurring of class distinctions, though essentially English society remains what it used to be in the nineteenth century. Essay XII. Why I Write In this essay originally written in 1946 for publication in the journal Gangrel, Orwell discusses the impulses that prompted him to take to creative writing as a profession. The motives that urged him to turn author are mainly those that urge every artist, namely, egoism and aesthetic pleasure. Like other writers, Orwell too had a passion for truth.What he calls the historical impulse is his concern for truth the truth about things as they are. In Orwells case, it was principally a concern for finding the truth about political institutions and movements as he understood them. In fact, the political purpose was strong and it bestowed on his writings a certain verve without affecting his aesthetic and intellectual integrity. c) Presentation of Content George Orwell in his essays has presented the issues that concerned him during the 1940s.In these essays we find considerations of the totalitarian impulse, the quality of modern intellectual life, the nature of modern art, nationalism, and the emergence of the new managerial society. All the essays are inter-connected as they are concerned with the real life and invites the readers to ponder upon certain subtle issues concerning the human life. They are all essays in thought and maintain a sequence of thought. Orwell has presented the content in his essays in the neutral style, good, limpid, contemporary, and it was always equal to its purposes. Within what seems a narrow down range, he showed virtuosity in the different timings.He managed diligently the narrative, descriptive, critical, denunciatory and dandy exposition from his life. Due to this he is also successful to reach to the target-groups from various cross-section of the society. d) Content Validity The content of the essays of Orwell has direct validity to the aims of his purpose. The subject as well as the content has been aptly justified wi th the references and circumstance to the situations. Orwell has presented his real life incidents with an aim to expose the hypocrisy of the powerful nations as well as the snobberies of the upper-class people. e) Language Lucidity and clarity are the two main features of Orwells prose style. He disliked all vagueness and ambiguity in thought and is clear and straightforward in his thinking. Often he writes the slangy, colloquial English, mostly his prose is that of the journalist. Moreover, we also do not find unnecessary ornamentation and use of a figurative language, rather he has oft made use of apt metaphors and images that enhances the beauty of his writing. John Atkins rightly observed, Orwells campaign was therefore for a language that should be both pure and subtle, flexible and simple. ) Justification of the Title of the Book The title of the book Essays of Orwell is apt and appropriate as it contains the selected essays written by George Orwell. g) Other features depending upon material selected The book also consists of the short summary of each of the essays along with the glossary and the foreign words at the end. Overall evaluation In Essays of Orwell we find a direct expression of Orwells ideas. Both quantitatively and qualitatively, his essays stand gilt comparision with the essays of the prominent essayists of modern times, like Gardiner, Chesterton, Stevenson, Huxley and others.The essay is the dominant literary form employed by Orwell throughout the later half of his writing career. As in his other works, so in his essays there is the frequent violation of the author and a direct expression of his ideas. According to B. T. Huxley, The real book binding of his work is to be found in the essays a form of writing mainly characterized by just such a personal assault on the part of the author. Some of the best work of Orwell is to be found in his essays. They constitute a valuable comment on chiding of contemporary life.Though h e was a professed socialist he did not accept a party line. He is quite sincere and honest about what he sys, and does not hesitate to criticize the terrors of fellow socialists and the short-comings of socialism. Orwell says, To write in plain, vigorous language, one has to think fearlessly, and if one thinks fearlessly, one can not be politically orthodox. John Atkins also says, Orwells singularity lay in his having the mind of an intellectual and the feelings of a common man. To solve we can say that the book makes an interesting reading for all the people who think.

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