My VIP for this week is George Orwell because I am studying his novel 1984.
The first thing that you should know is that George Orwell is the pen name of
Eric Arthur Blair! He was born on June 25, 1903, in Motihari, Bihar, in British
India. His great-grandfather Charles Blair was a “wealthy country gentleman in
Dorset” who received income from his plantations in Jamaica. He married Lady
Mary Fane, daughter of the Earl of Westmorland. His grandfather, Thomas Richard
Arthur Blair was a clergyman, and his father, Richard Walmesley Blair, worked
for the Indian Civil Service. His mother, Ida Mabel Limouzin Blair grew up in
Burma, and she had a French grandfather. He has two sisters, one five years
older and one five years younger. When he was one year old, his mother her children
took to England where his father joined them a few years later. “His birthplace
and ancestral house in [India] has been declared a protected monument of
historical importance.”
Blair attended school at St Cyprian’s
School, a boarding school, for five years. He wrote some of his first poems
there, but he hated the school. He earned scholarships to Wellington and Eton,
but there were no spots available at Eton. He attended Wellington for a few
months and then moved to Eton.
Even though Blair’s
great-grandparents were wealthy, the money did not pass down through the
generations. His parents could not afford to send him to university, and his
family decided that he should join the Imperial Police (later the Indian Police
Service). He took the entrance exam and had the seventh highest score out of
twenty-six candidates who passed. He accepted a post in Burma because his
maternal grandmother lived at Moulmein.
Blair returned to England when he
left the service, lived a few years in Paris, and returned to England. He was a
teacher at a private school for boys and later worked at a book store, all the
while attempting to establish himself as a writer.
Blair was married twice. He first
married Eileen O-Shaughnessy (m. 1936; d. 1945) and then married Sonia Brownell
(m. 1949). He was diagnosed with tuberculosis in December 1947. He courted
Sonia Brownell, but he went to the hospital in London soon after they announced
their engagement. They were married in the hospital on October 13, 1949. Early
in the morning of January 21, 1950, an artery burst in his lungs. He died at
age 46 in the University College Hospital in London, England. He was buried in
Sutton Courtenay, Oxfordshire, England.
Blair, under the pen name of George Orwell
became an English novelist, poet, essayist, journalist, and critic. His work shows
his interest in social injustice, opposition to totalitarianism, and support for democratic socialism.
He is best known for his allegorical novella Animal Farm (1945) and his dystopian novel Nineteen Eighty-four or 1984 (1949).
He was ranked as one of the 50 greatest British writers since 1945 by The Times in 2008.
Orwell’s work continues to influence
popular and political culture, and the term Orwellian
– descriptive of totalitarian or authoritarian social practices – has entered
the language together with many of his neologisms, including Big Brother, Thought Police, Room 101,
memory hole, newspeak, doublethink, proles, unperson, and thoughtcrime.
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