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Rat's avatar

This explains a lot. Perhaps one of Orwell's greatest insights – that there is an «outer party» that, despite possessing a nominal status, lives under harsher material and behavioral constraints than proles – comes from being born in an «outer party» family.

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Harry Watson's avatar

Another fascinating piece, Melissa. I've already mentioned Oliver Lewis's 'The Orwell Tour', in which he expands upon the influence on Orwell's future political thinking of his birthplace (you'll probably be aware that his father, while in India, was an agent in the Opium Department of the Government of India—Opium being a vital source of Government income) and then his schooling. From what I can discern, I'm unsure how much of an outsider Orwell was at Eton. Many comment on his propensity for and ability at team sports such as cricket and football (soccer), and he played many times in the Eton Wall Game, with claims he scored a goal (a very rare occurrence). Although it is a fact he never returned to the college after leaving despite many invitations. And Eton was no ordinary 'school' with a staff-to-pupil ratio of 1:8 and a level of education almost comparable to a good university. Two teachers there were the noted antiquarian MR James (of whom Orwell was impressed) and Orwell's French master, Aldous Huxley. Orwell also wrote articles for the Eton newspaper, but it's true that academically, he 'failed' or, more likely, didn't try. As to Burma, we must remember that Orwell had much affection for 'the East'. Like Oliver Lewis, I suspect that, given Orwell's lack of desire to continue in academia, he returned to a part of the world to which he had a nostalgic childhood recollection.

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