The Banality of Autocracy
What Orwell got right, and wrong, about power in the Age of Trump
The prescience of George Orwell’s 1984 is near-universally acknowledged across America. In this 1948 dystopian sci-fi novel that exhaustively details the workings and philosophies of a terrifyingly successful totalitarian government of the future, we find an analogue for seemingly every act of deception, repression and cruelty perpetrated by modern governments. Vocabulary from the novel like “doublethink” and “newspeak” have long been incorporated into the general lexicon.
Orwell’s genius (or perhaps just his highly effective observations of how oppressive regimes functioned) is unimpeachable, but Orwell’s book was fundamentally wrong in predicting the world we live in today. 1984 both underestimated the power of manipulative leaders, and overestimated human beings’ desire for truth and freedom.
On the Ministry of Truth
Nowhere are 1984’s shortcomings more evident than in the occupation of its hapless protagonist Winston Smith. Smith is a minor functionary working at the Oceanian government’s “Ministry of Truth.” His job consists of, each and every day, locating and destroying printed material that provides historical evidence to that might contradict whatever the ruling Party’s doctrine of the day is. He joins hundreds of others who work nonstop to ensure…