What Orwellian really means Noah Tavlin

If you’ve watched the news
or followed politics

chances are you’ve heard
the term Orwellian

thrown around
in one context or another.

But have you ever stopped to think
about what it really means,

or why it’s used so often?

The term was named
after British author Eric Blair

known by his pen name George Orwell.

Because his most famous work,
the novel “1984,”

depicts an oppressive society
under a totalitarian government,

“Orwellian” is often used simply
to mean authoritarian.

But using the term in this way

not only fails to fully
convey Orwell’s message,

it actually risks doing precisely what
he tried to warn against.

Orwell was indeed opposed
to all forms of tyranny,

spending much of his life fighting against
anti-democratic forces

of both the left-wing and the right.

But he was also deeply concerned
with how such ideologies proliferate.

And one of his most profound insights

was the importance that language plays
in shaping our thoughts and opinions.

The government of “1984”’s Oceania
controls its people’s actions and speech

in some ways that are obvious.

Their every move and word
is watched and heard,

and the threat of what happens
to those who step out of line

is always looming overhead.

Other forms of control are not so obvious.

The population is inundated
with a constant barrage of propaganda

made up of historical facts and statistics
manufactured in the Ministry of Truth.

The Ministry of Peace is the military.

Labor camps are called “Joycamps.”

Political prisoners are detained
and tortured in the Ministry of Love.

This deliberate irony is an example
of doublespeak,

when words are used not to convey meaning
but to undermine it,

corrupting the very ideas they refer to.

The regime’s control of language
goes even further,

eliminating words from
the English language

to create the official
dialect of Newspeak,

a crudely limited collection of acronyms
and simple concrete nouns

lacking any words complex enough
to encourage nuanced or critical thought.

This has an effect on the psyche
Orwell calls, “Doublethink,”

a hypnotic state of cognitive dissonance

in which one is compelled
to disregard their own perception

in place of the officially
dictated version of events,

leaving the individual
completely dependent

on the State’s definition
of reality itself.

The result is a world

in which even the privacy of one’s
own thought process is violated,

where one may be found guilty
of thoughtcrime by talking in their sleep,

and keeping a diary
or having a love affair

equals a subversive act of rebellion.

This might sound like something that can
only happen in totalitarian regimes,

but Orwell was warning us about
the potential for this occurring

even in democratic societies.

And this is why “authoritarian” alone
does not “Orwellian” make.

In his essay,
“Politics and the English Language,”

he described techniques like using
pretentious words to project authority,

or making atrocities sound acceptable
by burying them in euphemisms

and convoluted sentence structures.

But even more mundane abuses of language
can affect the way we think about things.

The words you see
and hear in everyday advertising

have been crafted to appeal to you
and affect your behavior,

as have the soundbites and talking points
of political campaigns

which rarely present the most
nuanced perspective on the issues.

And the way that we use ready-made phrases
and responses gleaned from media reports

or copied from the Internet

makes it easy to get away
with not thinking too deeply

or questioning your assumptions.

So the next time you hear someone
use the word Orwellian,

pay close attention.

If they’re talking about the deceptive
and manipulative use of language,

they’re on the right track.

If they’re talking about mass surveillance
and intrusive government,

they’re describing something authoritarian
but not necessarily Orwellian.

And if they use it as an all-purpose word
for any ideas they dislike,

it’s possible their statements
are more Orwellian

than whatever it is they’re criticizing.

Words have the power to shape thought.

Language is the currency of politics,

forming the basis of society from
the most common, everyday interactions

to the highest ideals.

Orwell urged us to protect our language

because ultimately our ability to think
and communicate clearly

is what stands between us and a world
where war is peace

and freedom is slavery.