People have always felt more than a touch of anxiety at the thought of being observed and watched at all times, even in one's most private moments. For the most part, this sort of constant and unrelenting surveillance has been limited to fiction and, theoretically, the countries that were once behind the fearsome Iron Curtain of the Soviet Union. There are a multitude of examples that could be used to show the potential choking and chilling effect, the crippling anxiety, and perhaps even the futility of resistance when one is faced with a society where everyone and anyone is being watched. Still, only a very few literary examples could pull it off quite as well as George Orwell's classic novel, “Nineteen-Eighty-Four.”
The novel takes place in a fictional setting in the year
1984, a time when England is ruled by a group known as “the Party” and headed
by a man known only as “Big Brother.” The anxiety comes from the fact that
everything is constantly being observed by a variety of means, not the least of
which are the various multitudes of screens that allow party members to watch
anything and everything that people do. The government also has departments
involved in rewriting history, administering all manner of propaganda,
controlling various goods, and even dictating the most private details of a
person's life. In essence, the England of the novel is almost completely devoid
of privacy. This is best exemplified by what might be the most famous words of
the novel itself: “Big Brother is watching you.”
In the midst of this anxiety-filled environment is a small
resistance movement that, as implied in the ending, is unlikely to get
anywhere. The constant threats of a war
against one of two other major powers, and hints of corruption at the very
heart of the ruling party. The entire novel narrates the attempts of two people
to have a clandestine, hidden affair from the ever-watchful eyes of the
government. The whole thing inevitably ends in failure, as both of them are
caught and subjected to various tortures and brain-washing techniques to make
them renounce their misgivings about the ruling party.
The novel, a grossly inaccurate a portrayal of the
then-future, endures because it evokes some truly timeless feelings among its
readers. The ruling party of Orwell's masterpiece controls everything and
enforces an unyielding loyalty to their cause, to the point that nobody
questions even the most ridiculous changes to history. This is best exemplified
by the constantly shifting alliances of the party in the wars that it fights
against the other powers of its time. People in the novel literally assume that
they have always been at war despite the fact that, just the week prior, they
were being told to lend their support to that country because it is an ally of the
party.
The near-religious focus of loyalty and devotion to the
enigmatic, possibly non-existent, figure known as “Big Brother” was, according
to a theory put forth within the novel itself, fuelled by sacrificing a
fundamental human desire. In the novel's case, it was a “redirected” sexual
desire that fuelled the obsessive devotion. In some ways, this apparent ability
to suppress something fundamental to the human psyche is a major part of the
novel's appeal.
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