Culture New '1984' Foreword Includes Warning About 'Problematic' Characters - The introduction to the new edition, endorsed by Orwell's estate and written by the American author Dolen Perkins-Valdezm, is at the center of the storm, drawing fire from conservative commentators as well as public intellectuals.

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The 75th anniversary edition of George Orwell's novel 1984, which coined the term "thoughtcrime" to describe the act of having thoughts that question the ruling party's ideology, has become an ironic lightning rod in debates over alleged trigger warnings and the role of historical context in classic literature.

The introduction to the new edition, endorsed by Orwell's estate and written by the American author Dolen Perkins-Valdezm, is at the center of the storm, drawing fire from conservative commentators as well as public intellectuals, and prompting a wide spectrum of reaction from academics who study Orwell's work.

Perkins-Valdez opens the introduction with a self-reflective exercise: imagining what it would be like to read 1984 for the first time today. She writes that "a sliver of connection can be difficult for someone like me to find in a novel that does not speak much to race and ethnicity," noting the complete absence of Black characters.

She also describes her pause at the protagonist Winston Smith's "despicable" misogyny, but ultimately chooses to continue reading, writing: "I know the difference between a flawed character and a flawed story."

"I'm enjoying the novel on its own terms, not as a classic but as a good story; that is, until Winston reveals himself to be a problematic character," she writes. "For example, we learn of him: 'He disliked nearly all women, and especially the young and pretty ones.' Whoa, wait a minute, Orwell."

That framing was enough to provoke sharp critique from novelist and essayist Walter Kirn on the podcast America This Week, co-hosted with journalist Matt Taibbi. Kirn characterized the foreword as a kind of ideological overreach. "Thank you for your trigger warning for 1984," he said. "It is the most 1984ish thing I've ever f***ing read."

Later in the episode, which debuted on June 1, Kirn blasted what he saw as an imposed "permission structure" by publishers and academic elites. "It's a sort of Ministry of Truthism," he said, referring to the Ministry of Truth that features prominently in the dystopian novel. "They're giving you a little guidebook to say, 'Here's how you're supposed to feel when you read this.'"

Conservative commentator such as Ed Morrissey described the foreword as part of "an attempt to rob [Orwell's work] of meaning by denigrating it as 'problematic.'" Morrissey argued that trigger warnings on literary classics serve to "distract readers at the start from its purpose with red herrings over issues of taste."

But not all responses aligned with that view.

Peter Brian Rose-Barry, a philosophy professor at Saginaw Valley State University and author of George Orwell: The Ethics of Equality, disputed the entire premise. "There just isn't [a trigger warning]," he told Newsweek in an email after examining the edition. "She never accuses Orwell of thoughtcrime. She never calls for censorship or cancelling Orwell."

In Rose-Barry's view, the foreword is neither invasive nor ideological, but reflective. "Perkins-Valdez suggests in her introduction that 'love and artistic beauty can act as healing forces in a totalitarian state,'" he noted. "Now, I find that deeply suspect... but I'd use this introduction to generate a discussion in my class."

Taibbi and Kirn, by contrast, took issue with that exact line during the podcast. "Love heals? In 1984?" Taibbi asked. "The whole thing ends with Winston broken, saying he loves Big Brother," the symbol of the totalitarian state at the heart of the book. Kirn laughed and added, "It's the kind of revisionist uplift you get from a book club discussion after someone just watched The Handmaid's Tale."

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Photographs of Eric Blair, whose pen name was George Orwell, from his Metropolitan Police file, c.1940.
The National Archives UK


Perkins-Valdez, a Black writer, Harvard graduate and professor of literature at American University, also noted the novel's lack of racial representation: "That sliver of connection can be difficult for someone like me to find in a novel that does not speak much to race and ethnicity at all."

Kirn responded to that sentiment on the show by pointing out that Orwell was writing about midcentury Britain: "When Orwell wrote the book, Black people made up maybe one percent of the population. It's like expecting white characters in every Nigerian novel."

Richard Keeble, former chair of the Orwell Society, argued that critiques of Orwell's treatment of race and gender have long been part of academic discourse. "Questioning Orwell's representation of Blacks in 1984 can usefully lead us to consider the evolution of his ideas on race generally," he told Newsweek. "Yet Orwell struggled throughout his life, and not with complete success, to exorcise what Edward Said called 'Orientalism.'"

Keeble added, "Trigger warnings and interpretative forewords... join the rich firmament of Orwellian scholarship—being themselves open to critique and analysis."

While critics like Kirn view Perkins-Valdez's new foreword as a symptom of virtue signaling run amok, others see it as part of a long-standing literary dialogue. Laura Beers, a historian at American University and author of Orwell's Ghosts: Wisdom and Warnings for the Twenty-First Century, acknowledged that such reactions reflect deeper political divides. But she defended the legitimacy of approaching Orwell through modern ethical and social lenses.

"What makes 1984 such a great novel is that it was written to transcend a specific historical context," she told Newsweek. "Although it has frequently been appropriated by the right as a critique of 'socialism,' it was never meant to be solely a critique of Stalin's Russia."

While critics like Kirn view Perkins-Valdez's new foreword as a symptom of virtue signaling run amok, others see it as part of a long-standing literary dialogue. Laura Beers, a historian at American University and author of Orwell's Ghosts: Wisdom and Warnings for the Twenty-First Century, acknowledged that such reactions reflect deeper political divides. But she defended the legitimacy of approaching Orwell through modern ethical and social lenses.

"What makes 1984 such a great novel is that it was written to transcend a specific historical context," she told Newsweek. "Although it has frequently been appropriated by the right as a critique of 'socialism,' it was never meant to be solely a critique of Stalin's Russia."

"Rather," she added, "it was a commentary on how absolute power corrupts absolutely, and the risk to all societies, including democracies like Britain and the United States, of the unchecked concentration of power."

Beers also addressed the role of interpretive material in shaping the reading experience. "Obviously, yes, in that 'interpretive forewords' give a reader an initial context in which to situate the texts that they are reading," she said. "That said, such forewords are more often a reflection on the attitudes and biases of their own time."

While the foreword has prompted the familiar battle lines playing out across the Trump-era culture wars, Beers sees the conversation itself as in keeping with Orwell's legacy.

"By attempting to place Orwell's work in conversation with changing values and historical understandings in the decades since he was writing," she said, "scholars like Perkins-Valdez are exercising the very freedom to express uncomfortable and difficult opinions that Orwell explicitly championed."

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Just need to say, this thread sums up why I love KF.
You won't find any biting , accurate criticism of this Perkins Valdez character anywhere else. Except some of the podcasts already mentioned.

No mention of the novel's "anti-sex league"--this tells you she didn't read the book.
I was first amazed by the concept since I was assigned to read it as a teenager and could NOT imagine any "anti sex league" being successful with teenagers actually joining, unless significant pressure from the church.
e.g. southern evangelical teens and "true love waits" movement during the Bush era(s).

Then I realized, the party was the church.

Winston’s hatred of women is plot point, you idiot, not a flaw. The society he lives in makes the young women loathesome cheerleaders for the regime, and alienates him from women he could love due to state interference in every aspect of his personal life.

precisely.
The undercurrent was also that you could not TRUST these women, they would run to the state and snitch you out if you made a single anti party statement. (and who even knows what they considered that to be?)
The young men who 'hate' (mistrust, resent) the dangerhair girls who parrot current regime propaganda, are just like Winston.
Their clown-hair colors scream ANTI SEX LEAGUE buttons, properly worn for all to see.
 
His other stuff is well worth a read. The descriptions of poverty in ‘the road to Wigan pier’ are visceral. He describes a boarding house and how the men in it huddle under great coats in beds they use on rotation, and the filth and the despair. It’s affecting stuff.
Anyone horrified by the return to that kind of communal living arrangement driven by poverty should read it. We are less than a hundred years from the point we had workhouses in the UK. We had working people treated like serfs, no safety measures, kids working too, mixing lead into white paint and picking up scraps of coal to heat their hovels. This is where we will go back to if some people get their way.
 
The same could probably be said about Brave New World and Fahrenheit-451.
It is even more obvious with those two, since both of them are arguably more prophetic than 1984. They were both better at predicting the way technological advancement would interset with culture, both in the form of slop entertainment (Farenheit-451) and medication/drugs (Brave New World.) For these books, people willingly accepted control because it made their lives simpler and more comfortable.

With 1984 what confuses readers is mainly two things: the general western conflation of totalitarianism with communism, and the lack of knowledge about the historical context of 1984 and what Orwell was doing with the book.

Thematically, 1984 is a book where Orwell is engaging directly with the managerialism hypothesis of James Burnham. The O'Brien character was directly based on Burnham, who was a former trot-turned-neocon who both helped found the modern American conservative movement with William F. Buckley and worked for the OSS (CIA) to turn anti-Soviet leftist artists and intellectuals into agents for western propaganda. Orwell was one of these anti-Soviet leftists. Remember Orwell's list? He was an informant for the British foreign office ffs. 1984 is as much about the ways the west was subtly controlled by its intelligence community and propaganda in its media post-WW2 as it is about anything east of the iron curtain.

In Burnham's hypothesis, managerialism is the unifying principle between western managed democracy, soviet communism and continental fascism. That's why all the major powers in 1984 are functionally identical, and why the totalitarianism on display in the book can feel like an analogue to soviet communism and the west at the same time. It is in fact an analogue to both at once.
 
Just verbal masturbation. Easy enough to get copies of the book without such bullshit. The great works of literature, such as 1984, should be left alone by those jerkoffs who practice revisionist history.

Anymore, when I see someone with a hyphenated last name I assume they are a fucking idiot. Sure not wrong, reading the OP.
 
I shouldn't be surprised our local Stalinist apparatchik showed up to shit all over 1984, but I am saddened nonetheless.
 
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The misogyny of Winston is quite an important part of the novel as the book explains how this hatred is both born from his disgust of her as a symbol of the party and also because the party instills hatred of the other sex in its propaganda. The best introduction for this book is the one Pynchon wrote: http://www.edarcipelago.com/boxpdf/1984gorwell.pdf

Yes this!! Not to mention the misogyny of the women in the book, who either push pornography or abstinence and degrade women from both sides. But either way, they’re endlessly brainwashed to serve the Party just like men.
 
Perkins-Valdez, a Black writer, Harvard graduate and professor of literature at American University, also noted the novel's lack of racial representation: "That sliver of connection can be difficult for someone like me to find in a novel that does not speak much to race and ethnicity at all."
The colossal fucking ego of the top of the modern progressive stack on full display.

Not every story needs niggers in it. It’s set in a future UK and at the time of writing, the black population of the UK was likely less than 10,000 (even today it’s less than 4% of the UK population overall).

The fact that this wooly headed walking diversity meme is even given the space to piss and moan in a foreword shows she’s completely and unironically unaware of her own privilege.

There’s now exactly one black person in the new edition of ‘1984’ and congratulations, because now everyone with more than half a brain hates the cunt. Well played, dumbass.
 
So really, what they are saying is that even Orwell, the creator of an entire dystopian-fiction genre, could not have imagined the hellscape that is post-Windrush, culturally-enriched London. In 1984, he imagined the worst possible London that he could conjure from the deepest, darkest recesses of his psyche, and even that most terrifying vision of the future was free from the black and brown menace. If only he knew how bad things would get after 1948..
 
Taibbi and Kirn, by contrast, took issue with that exact line during the podcast. "Love heals? In 1984?" Taibbi asked. "The whole thing ends with Winston broken, saying he loves Big Brother," the symbol of the totalitarian state at the heart of the book. Kirn laughed and added, "It's the kind of revisionist uplift you get from a book club discussion after someone just watched The Handmaid's Tale."
"watched the handmaids tale"
Wasn't that a book series originally? Do these people not rea-oh of course they don't that doesn't make them money.
 
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