It's been so long, and I really don't give a shit about the guy, but iirc he actually identified himself as a "english socialist" to differentiate himself from all the other forms which he considered uncivilized.
So I think ingsoc is basically him getting mad at a made-up situation wherein the Stalinists/Nazis (one in the same in Orwell's completely incoherent mind) come into England and co-opt his weird conservative form of socialism.
Ok Orwell had his share of brain worms but let's not misconstrue him, the point of 1984 wasn't "USSR = Nazis = bad," it was a warning against what he saw as the possibillity of popular energy being chanelled in support of state power, ultimately for the self-interest of a ruling class.
Yeah that's fair. I read it a while back and thought it was a decent book, but it doesn't really say anything particularly profound, I just liked it for being imaginative and presenting an interesting dystopia.
People criticize it for being "hyperbolic" but that's the entire point, he's describing state power taken to its logical extreme, using techniques for coercion that already existed in the world at the time. It's a warning about how any political consciousness among the lower classes could be completely and permanently subdued, and there's something there even if it's not some sort of extremely important political theory like the comment in the screenshot seems to think.
It's been so long, and I really don't give a shit about the guy, but iirc he actually identified himself as a "english socialist" to differentiate himself from all the other forms which he considered uncivilized.
So I think ingsoc is basically him getting mad at a made-up situation wherein the Stalinists/Nazis (one in the same in Orwell's completely incoherent mind) come into England and co-opt his weird conservative form of socialism.
Ok Orwell had his share of brain worms but let's not misconstrue him, the point of 1984 wasn't "USSR = Nazis = bad," it was a warning against what he saw as the possibillity of popular energy being chanelled in support of state power, ultimately for the self-interest of a ruling class.
I'd have to reread it to see if that nuance exists in it, so I'll take your word for it lol
Yeah that's fair. I read it a while back and thought it was a decent book, but it doesn't really say anything particularly profound, I just liked it for being imaginative and presenting an interesting dystopia.
People criticize it for being "hyperbolic" but that's the entire point, he's describing state power taken to its logical extreme, using techniques for coercion that already existed in the world at the time. It's a warning about how any political consciousness among the lower classes could be completely and permanently subdued, and there's something there even if it's not some sort of extremely important political theory like the comment in the screenshot seems to think.