Definition: To describe something as "Orwellian" is to say that
it brings to mind the fictional totalitarian society of Oceania
described in George Orwell's novel Nineteen Eighty-Four.
In
Orwell's novel, all citizens of Oceania are monitored by cameras, are
fed fabricated news stories by the government, are forced to worship a
mythical government leader called Big Brother, are indoctrinated to
believe nonsense statements (the mantra "WAR IS PEACE, SLAVERY IS
FREEDOM, IGNORANCE IS STRENGTH"), and are subject to torture and
execution if they question the order of things.
The word is sometimes used to describe a particularly anti-libertarian
government policy, but it is also sometimes used to describe the
peculiar, nonsensical thought process behind Oceania's social
structure--a thought process in which ideas that are obviously
self-contradictory are accepted as true based on the fact that an
authority figure is asserting them.
The Bush administration's No
Child Left Behind program (which is unfunded and therefore technically
leaves children behind) and Clear Skies Initiative (which weakens
anti-pollution regulations and therefore technically makes skies less
clear) are often cited as examples of Orwellian policies, but so are
London's omnipresent surveillance cameras and North Korea's patriotism
indoctrination camps.
The best way to understand what does and does not constitute Orwellian policy is to read Nineteen Eighty-Four
itself. Secondhand descriptions of Oceania do not do justice to the
oppressive, mind-wracking atmosphere described in the novel.
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