×

Χρησιμοποιούμε cookies για να βελτιώσουμε τη λειτουργία του LingQ. Επισκέπτοντας τον ιστότοπο, συμφωνείς στην πολιτική για τα cookies.

image

Crash Course: English Literature, George Orwell's 1984, Part 2: Crash Course Literature 402 - YouTube (1)

George Orwell's 1984, Part 2: Crash Course Literature 402 - YouTube (1)

Hi I'm John Green, this is Crash Course literature, and today we're going back to

the future–that is now past–to George Orwell's 1984, which imagines a terrifying

world in which every human activity is recorded and monitored.

How unpleasant would that be, he said staring into a camera lens.

So, as mentioned in our previous episode, the Newspeak language created in the book

was intended “to make speech [...] as nearly as possible independent of consciousness”

(319).

In an episode of Crash Course Psychology, my brother, Hank, defined “consciousness”

as “our awareness of ourselves and our environment.”

I would add that consciousness also explains our ability to experience life and to feel

emotions.

So can the structure of a language actually be “independent of human consciousness.”?

Well, today, we'll explore whether language is imposed on us from the outside or whether

it's an innate feature of humanity.

I'm also gonna talk about how this novel was perceived, when it was published, in the

actual 1984, and how people think about it today.

And we'll go ahead and make some connections between Orwell's novel and our current society's

really confusing relationship with truth and surveillance.

Yeah, we can still criticize surveillance society.

that's not a thoughtcrime.

Yet..

INTRO In 1984, Orwell's protagonist, Winston Smith,

works in the Records Department of the Ministry of Truth (in Newspeak, known as “Minitrue”).

He adjusts financial and weather forecasts so that “Big Brother's” predictions

are always retroactively correct.

He also removes references to “unpersons,” or “vaporised” political dissidents.

And he rewrites history so that Oceania appears always to have been at war with EastAsia.

Or with Eurasia.

It changes, depending on shifting allegiances.

The “central tenet” of Ingsoc (the version of English Socialism practiced in Oceania)

is that the past is “mutable,” that it has “no objective existence,” and it exists

only in “written records and in human memories.”

Orwell writes: The past is whatever the records and the memories

agree upon.

And since the Party is in full control of all records and in equally full control of

the minds of its members, it follows that the past is whatever the Party chooses to

make it” (219).

So, Winston mainly writes in Newspeak--a version of English with grammar and vocabulary designed

to “narrow the range of thought.”

The idea is that, without the language to express dissent, political crimes, in thought

or deed, will become impossible.

But quickly, before we get to the chicken and egg problem of language and thought, though,

I want to pause to ask you to think about this novel's relationship to memory.

Now, we know from neuroscience that each time a memory is accessed, you're remembering

it anew--there's no, like, spot in your brain containing a memory; it is formed each

time you have it.

And that means that your memories are shaped by your now--and that at least to some extent,

the Party is right when it says that telling people what they remember does change their

memories.

So, the Party is manipulating a real, structural feature of the human brain--as we learned

in our discussion of Gabriel Garcia Marquez's One Hundred Years of Solitude, “What matters

in life is not what happens to you but what you remember and how you remember it.”

OK, so with that noted, let's turn to thought: Many experts have explored to what extent

our ability to think is dependent on language.

In the late 1920s, the ethno-linguist Edward Sapir began talking in academic circles about

his theory that the structure of the language a person uses determines how they perceive

and categorize experience.

When his student, Benjamin Whorf, published his writings in the 1950s, this theory became

known as “the Sapir-Whorf Hypothesis.”

Then, in the 1960s, Noam Chomsky questioned the premise of this theory, arguing that humans

are born with an innate knowledge of grammar that forms the basis for language acquisition.

And in 1994, Steven Pinker argued that language is a basic instinct, and that the ability

to understand, manipulate, and add to it based on one's own experiences is an expression

of one's humanity.

In fact, he wrote a book called The Language Instinct.

But before any of these theories were published, Orwell was also thinking about the relationship

between instinct and language.

Let's go to the Thought Bubble.

The word “instinct” appears 31 times in 1984.

Winston is a creature of instinct, and his strongest instinct is to survive: “To hang

on from day to day and from week to week, spinning out a present that had no future,

seemed an unconquerable instinct, just as one's lungs will always draw the next breath

so long as there is air available” (emphasis added, 155).

Winston understands that his society is inhumane: “It MIGHT be true that the average human

being was better off now than he had been before the Revolution.

The only evidence to the contrary was the mute protest in your own bones, the instinctive

feeling that the conditions you lived in were intolerable and that at some other time they

must have been different” (emphasis added, 76).

So to Orwell there are human instincts toward generosity and survival and liberty, but Orwell

is also aware how dangerous human instincts can be, particularly when manipulated by a

totalitarian state.

For example, the Party transforms an innate fear of death into mob violence:

“For how could the fear, the hatred, and the lunatic credulity which the Party needed

in its members be kept at the right pitch, except by bottling down some powerful instinct

and using it as a driving force?”

(emphasis added, 136).

It also transforms the survival instinct into a form of self-repression: “Crimestop”

is the ability to cut off one's ideas, “...as though by instinct, at the threshold of any

dangerous thought” (217).

Thanks, Thought Bubble.

But of course, those thoughts are only dangerous because the government might kill you for

having them.

But -- and I think this is critical -- writing in Newspeak and participating in Party rallies

alone does not alter Winston's consciousness, and it doesn't seem to change his instincts

-- he's still able to love Julia, and in little ways to live his “ownlife” life.

But then, eventually, Winston does betray his girlfriend, Julia, and he comes to believe

that he “should” repress his thoughts.

So ultimately, he loses his sense of self.

But not, I would argue, entirely because of Newspeak.

Mostly because of torture.

In the end his consciousness can't survive being threatened with having his head put

in a cage with hungry rats.

It is then that Winston breaks down and wishes that Julia receive this punishment in his

place.

And by betraying Julia, he loses his ability to love.

He loses faith in his own humanity.

And after Winston is psychologically broken, he starts to think in Newspeak.

Consider his stream of (non-) conscious narrative: “The mind should develop a blind spot whenever

a dangerous thought presented itself.

The process should be automatic, instinctive.

CRIMESTOP, they called it in Newspeak” (emphasis added, 288).

So initial use of Newspeak might be part of Winston's journey toward the lack of consciousness,

but it's the physical and psychological torture that really take him there.

And with that in mind, we can turn to the question of whether words actually matter.

I mean, can ‘good' language or ‘good' books enhance the human experience?

I believe so.

And I think Orwell must have believed so, too, or else he wouldn't have written 1984.

And as we talked about in the last video, we know that free expression survives within

the logic of the novel, because the appendix is written in Standard English

It also refers to the totalitarian government in the past tense.

So we know that humanity eventually triumphs over oppression and oppressive language!

Free thought and free speech endure!

Great, but Orwell doesn't tell us how those victories were won.

One minute, Winston is in love with Big Brother, the next minute, Appendix in Standard English.

But that hasn't stopped readers from trying to use 1984 to diagnose (and solve) problems

unique to their times.

Like, when 1984 was first published, Time Magazine claimed that “any reader in 1949

can uneasily see his own shattered features in Winston Smith, can scent in the world of

1984 a stench that is already familiar.”

Other early reviewers at the time read 1984 as an attack on British Socialism.

In a letter to a friend, Orwell explained that the novel:

“...is NOT intended as an attack on Socialism or on the British Labor Party (of which I

am a supporter) but as a show-up of the perversions to which a centralized economy is liable and

which have already been partly realized in Communism and Fascism.”

In the years after the book was published, readers began associating Orwell's name

with the forms of oppression that he critiqued.

Surveillance?

“Quite Orwellian!”

Propaganda?

“Also Orwellian.”

But actually anti-Orwellian!

In 1983, a Time Magazine journalist tried to reappropriate the term “Orwellian”

to make it signify, “the spirit that fights the worst tendencies in politics and society

by using a fundamental sense of decency.”

Of course, that was a failure.

If you Google “Orwellian,” you'll find a long list of ways it has been applied to

various misuses of government power.

Poor Orwell.

Not since Dr. Frankenstein has someone so often been inappropriately alluded to.

And then of course there is the question of our today, and whether it resembles the Oceania

of 1984.

In terms of politics, neither the U.S. nor the U.K. look much like Oceania.

Whatever you think of our elected officials, they are just that.

Elected.

In fact, a higher percentage of people on Earth today live in democracies than did in

1949, or for that matter 1984.

So it's actually been a pretty good seven decades for democracy, but, there are some

similarities between contemporary life and the future that Orwell imagined:

For instance our time has some serious issues with the dissemination of objective fact.

There's a good reason that Stephen Colbert's word “truthiness,” meaning “a truth

that wouldn't stand to be held back by fact” was chosen by the American Dialect Society

as the word of the year in 2005.

Propaganda, both subtle and overt, continue to distort social and political discourse

around the world.

And then there's the issue of surveillance...

in Oceania, the government places microphones and telescreens in public spaces and private

homes.

And the telescreen is an addictive content provider--broadcasting news, weather reports,

and interactive exercise videos.

It detects sounds above a whisper and movement within its field of vision.

In Winston's apartment, it can be dimmed, but not turned off completely.

Creepier still: there was, “...no way of knowing whether you were being watched at

any given moment” (3).

Today, we, too, have audio and video surveillance in shops, and airports, and public parts of

big cities, and also in our homes--alexa, can you make sure not to spy on me?

{[[Alexa, off-screen]] I'm sorry, John.

I'm afraid I can't do that.}

I have to say, I don't find that answer terribly comforting.

And this loss of privacy is the trade-off that we make for increased security and convenience.

But also, think about how much of your ownlife and consciousness also exists out there in

the personal information you willingly post online.

We have Snapchat, and Instagram, and Twitter, and Pinterest, and Tumblr, and WhatsApp, and

LinkedIn, and YouTube, and I think we still have Google Plus.

And if you're waiting for me to denounce social media, I'm not gonna.

These are amazing ways to broadcast pictures of yourself being cool and to publish your

thoughts from the sublime to the ridiculous.

We indicate our preferences by liking, swiping, reposting, and commenting.

We tag all the wonderful places that we visit and show everyone what we ate while we were

there.

Social media is fun!

It's awesome!

I'm in favor of it.

But have you read the privacy policy of each service you use?

Learn languages from TV shows, movies, news, articles and more! Try LingQ for FREE

George Orwell's 1984, Part 2: Crash Course Literature 402 - YouTube (1) George Orwells 1984, Teil 2: Crashkurs Literatur 402 - YouTube (1) 1984 de George Orwell, Parte 2: Curso acelerado de literatura 402 - YouTube (1) George Orwell's 1984, Part 2 : Crash Course Literature 402 - YouTube (1) 1984 di George Orwell, parte 2: Corso accelerato di letteratura 402 - YouTube (1) George Orwell's 1984, część 2: Crash Course Literatura 402 - YouTube (1) George Orwell'in 1984'ü, Bölüm 2: Crash Course Literature 402 - YouTube (1) Джордж Орвелл "1984", частина 2: експрес-курс з літератури 402 - YouTube (1) 乔治·奥威尔的《1984》,第 2 部分:文学速成课程 402 - YouTube (1)

Hi I'm John Green, this is Crash Course literature, and today we're going back to Hola, soy John Green, esto es Crash Course Literatura, y hoy volvemos al

the future–that is now past–to George Orwell's 1984, which imagines a terrifying futuro, que ahora es pasado, a 1984 de George Orwell, que se imagina un terrorífico

world in which every human activity is recorded and monitored. mundo en el que cada actividad humana se registra y monitorea.

How unpleasant would that be, he said staring into a camera lens. Qué desagradable sería eso, dijo mirando la lente de una cámara.

So, as mentioned in our previous episode, the Newspeak language created in the book Entonces, como se mencionó en nuestro episodio anterior, el lenguaje de Neolengua creado en el libro

was intended “to make speech [...] as nearly as possible independent of consciousness” tenía la intención de "hacer que el habla sea lo más independiente posible de la conciencia"

(319). En un episodio de Crash Course Psicología, mi hermano, Hank, definió "conciencia"

In an episode of Crash Course Psychology, my brother, Hank, defined “consciousness”

as “our awareness of ourselves and our environment.”

I would add that consciousness also explains our ability to experience life and to feel emociones.

emotions. Entonces, ¿La estructura de un lenguaje puede ser "independiente de la conciencia humana"?

So can the structure of a language actually be “independent of human consciousness.”?

Well, today, we'll explore whether language is imposed on us from the outside or whether

it's an innate feature of humanity.

I'm also gonna talk about how this novel was perceived, when it was published, in the

actual 1984, and how people think about it today.

And we'll go ahead and make some connections between Orwell's novel and our current society's

really confusing relationship with truth and surveillance.

Yeah, we can still criticize surveillance society. Todavía

that's not a thoughtcrime.

Yet..

INTRO In 1984, Orwell's protagonist, Winston Smith, En 1984, el protagonista de Orwell, Winston Smith,

works in the Records Department of the Ministry of Truth (in Newspeak, known as “Minitrue”). trabaja en el Departamento de Registros del Ministerio de la Verdad (en Neolengua, conocido como "Miniver").

He adjusts financial and weather forecasts so that “Big Brother's” predictions Ajusta las previsiones financieras y meteorológicas para que las predicciones de "Gran hermano"

are always retroactively correct. siempre sean retroactivamente correctas.

He also removes references to “unpersons,” or “vaporised” political dissidents. |||||||vaporized|| También elimina las referencias de disidentes políticos vaporizados por "nopersonas"

And he rewrites history so that Oceania appears always to have been at war with EastAsia. Y reescribe la historia para que Oceanía siempre haya estado en guerra con Asia Oriental.

Or with Eurasia. O con Eurasia.

It changes, depending on shifting allegiances. Cambia, dependiendo del cambio de lealtades.

The “central tenet” of Ingsoc (the version of English Socialism practiced in Oceania) El "principio central" de Ingsoc (la versión del socialismo inglés practicada en Oceanía)

is that the past is “mutable,” that it has “no objective existence,” and it exists es que el pasado es "mutable", que no tiene "existencia objetiva", y existe

only in “written records and in human memories.” solo en "registros escritos y en recuerdos humanos".

Orwell writes: The past is whatever the records and the memories Orwell escribe: "El pasado es lo que sea que los registros y las memorias

agree upon. acuerden.

And since the Party is in full control of all records and in equally full control of Y dado que el Partido tiene el control total de todos los registros y el control igualmente pleno de

the minds of its members, it follows that the past is whatever the Party chooses to la mente de sus miembros, se deduce que el pasado es lo que el Partido decida hacer.

make it” (219). Entonces, Winston escribe principalmente en Neolengua, una versión del inglés diseñada con gramática y vocabulario

So, Winston mainly writes in Newspeak--a version of English with grammar and vocabulary designed

to “narrow the range of thought.”

The idea is that, without the language to express dissent, political crimes, in thought

or deed, will become impossible.

But quickly, before we get to the chicken and egg problem of language and thought, though,

I want to pause to ask you to think about this novel's relationship to memory.

Now, we know from neuroscience that each time a memory is accessed, you're remembering

it anew--there's no, like, spot in your brain containing a memory; it is formed each

time you have it.

And that means that your memories are shaped by your now--and that at least to some extent,

the Party is right when it says that telling people what they remember does change their

memories. Entonces, el Partido está manipulando una característica estructural real del cerebro humano, tal como lo aprendimos

So, the Party is manipulating a real, structural feature of the human brain--as we learned

in our discussion of Gabriel Garcia Marquez's One Hundred Years of Solitude, “What matters

in life is not what happens to you but what you remember and how you remember it.”

OK, so with that noted, let's turn to thought: Many experts have explored to what extent

our ability to think is dependent on language.

In the late 1920s, the ethno-linguist Edward Sapir began talking in academic circles about

his theory that the structure of the language a person uses determines how they perceive

and categorize experience.

When his student, Benjamin Whorf, published his writings in the 1950s, this theory became

known as “the Sapir-Whorf Hypothesis.”

Then, in the 1960s, Noam Chomsky questioned the premise of this theory, arguing that humans

are born with an innate knowledge of grammar that forms the basis for language acquisition.

And in 1994, Steven Pinker argued that language is a basic instinct, and that the ability

to understand, manipulate, and add to it based on one's own experiences is an expression de la humanidad.

of one's humanity. De hecho, él escribió un libro llamado El Instinto del Lenguaje.

In fact, he wrote a book called The Language Instinct.

But before any of these theories were published, Orwell was also thinking about the relationship

between instinct and language.

Let's go to the Thought Bubble.

The word “instinct” appears 31 times in 1984.

Winston is a creature of instinct, and his strongest instinct is to survive: “To hang

on from day to day and from week to week, spinning out a present that had no future,

seemed an unconquerable instinct, just as one's lungs will always draw the next breath

so long as there is air available” (emphasis added, 155).

Winston understands that his society is inhumane: “It MIGHT be true that the average human

being was better off now than he had been before the Revolution.

The only evidence to the contrary was the mute protest in your own bones, the instinctive

feeling that the conditions you lived in were intolerable and that at some other time they que las condiciones en las que vivía eran intolerables y que en otro momento

must have been different” (emphasis added, 76). debió haber sido diferente"

So to Orwell there are human instincts toward generosity and survival and liberty, but Orwell Entonces, para Orwell hay instintos humanos hacia la generosidad, la supervivencia y la libertad, pero Orwell

is also aware how dangerous human instincts can be, particularly when manipulated by a también es consciente de lo peligrosos que pueden ser los instintos humanos, particularmente cuando son manipulados por un

totalitarian state. estado totalitario.

For example, the Party transforms an innate fear of death into mob violence: Por ejemplo, el Partido transforma un miedo innato a la muerte en violencia de masas:

“For how could the fear, the hatred, and the lunatic credulity which the Party needed "¿Cómo podía el miedo, el odio y la credulidad lunática que el Partido necesitaba

in its members be kept at the right pitch, except by bottling down some powerful instinct en sus miembros mantener en el tono correcto, excepto al embotellar algún instinto poderoso

and using it as a driving force?” y usarlo como una fuerza motriz?"

(emphasis added, 136). También transforma el instinto de supervivencia en una forma de auto-represión: "Paracrimen"

It also transforms the survival instinct into a form of self-repression: “Crimestop”

is the ability to cut off one's ideas, “...as though by instinct, at the threshold of any pensamiento peligroso"

dangerous thought” (217). Gracias, Thought Bubble.

Thanks, Thought Bubble. Pero, por supuesto, esos pensamientos solo son peligrosos porque el gobierno podría matarte por

But of course, those thoughts are only dangerous because the government might kill you for tenerlos.

having them. Pero -y creo que esto es crítico-, escribir en Neolengua y participar solo en los mítines del Partido

But -- and I think this is critical -- writing in Newspeak and participating in Party rallies

alone does not alter Winston's consciousness, and it doesn't seem to change his instincts

-- he's still able to love Julia, and in little ways to live his “ownlife” life.

But then, eventually, Winston does betray his girlfriend, Julia, and he comes to believe

that he “should” repress his thoughts.

So ultimately, he loses his sense of self.

But not, I would argue, entirely because of Newspeak.

Mostly because of torture.

In the end his consciousness can't survive being threatened with having his head put

in a cage with hungry rats.

It is then that Winston breaks down and wishes that Julia receive this punishment in his

place. Y al traicionar a Julia, pierde su capacidad de amar.

And by betraying Julia, he loses his ability to love.

He loses faith in his own humanity.

And after Winston is psychologically broken, he starts to think in Newspeak.

Consider his stream of (non-) conscious narrative: “The mind should develop a blind spot whenever

a dangerous thought presented itself.

The process should be automatic, instinctive.

CRIMESTOP, they called it in Newspeak” (emphasis added, 288).

So initial use of Newspeak might be part of Winston's journey toward the lack of consciousness,

but it's the physical and psychological torture that really take him there.

And with that in mind, we can turn to the question of whether words actually matter.

I mean, can ‘good' language or ‘good' books enhance the human experience? Eso creo.

I believe so. Y creo que Orwell debe haberlo creído también, o de lo contrario no habría escrito 1984.

And I think Orwell must have believed so, too, or else he wouldn't have written 1984.

And as we talked about in the last video, we know that free expression survives within

the logic of the novel, because the appendix is written in Standard English

It also refers to the totalitarian government in the past tense.

So we know that humanity eventually triumphs over oppression and oppressive language!

Free thought and free speech endure!

Great, but Orwell doesn't tell us how those victories were won.

One minute, Winston is in love with Big Brother, the next minute, Appendix in Standard English.

But that hasn't stopped readers from trying to use 1984 to diagnose (and solve) problems

unique to their times.

Like, when 1984 was first published, Time Magazine claimed that “any reader in 1949

can uneasily see his own shattered features in Winston Smith, can scent in the world of

1984 a stench that is already familiar.”

Other early reviewers at the time read 1984 as an attack on British Socialism.

In a letter to a friend, Orwell explained that the novel:

“...is NOT intended as an attack on Socialism or on the British Labor Party (of which I

am a supporter) but as a show-up of the perversions to which a centralized economy is liable and ||||||||||perversions||||||||

which have already been partly realized in Communism and Fascism.”

In the years after the book was published, readers began associating Orwell's name

with the forms of oppression that he critiqued. ¿Vigilancia?

Surveillance? "¡Bastante orwelliano!"

“Quite Orwellian!” ¿Propaganda?

Propaganda? "También Orwelliano".

“Also Orwellian.”

But actually anti-Orwellian!

In 1983, a Time Magazine journalist tried to reappropriate the term “Orwellian” |||||||reappropriate|||

to make it signify, “the spirit that fights the worst tendencies in politics and society

by using a fundamental sense of decency.”

Of course, that was a failure.

If you Google “Orwellian,” you'll find a long list of ways it has been applied to

various misuses of government power. Pobre Orwell.

Poor Orwell. Desde el Dr. Frankenstein no se ha aludido a alguien tan a menudo.

Not since Dr. Frankenstein has someone so often been inappropriately alluded to.

And then of course there is the question of our today, and whether it resembles the Oceania

of 1984.

In terms of politics, neither the U.S. nor the U.K. look much like Oceania.

Whatever you think of our elected officials, they are just that.

Elected.

In fact, a higher percentage of people on Earth today live in democracies than did in

1949, or for that matter 1984.

So it's actually been a pretty good seven decades for democracy, but, there are some

similarities between contemporary life and the future that Orwell imagined:

For instance our time has some serious issues with the dissemination of objective fact.

There's a good reason that Stephen Colbert's word “truthiness,” meaning “a truth

that wouldn't stand to be held back by fact” was chosen by the American Dialect Society

as the word of the year in 2005.

Propaganda, both subtle and overt, continue to distort social and political discourse alrededor del mundo.

around the world. Y luego está el tema de la vigilancia ... en Oceanía, el gobierno coloca micrófonos

And then there's the issue of surveillance...

in Oceania, the government places microphones and telescreens in public spaces and private y telepantallas en espacios públicos y hogares privados.

homes. Y la telepantalla es un proveedor de contenido adictivo: noticias de transmisión, informes meteorológicos,

And the telescreen is an addictive content provider--broadcasting news, weather reports,

and interactive exercise videos.

It detects sounds above a whisper and movement within its field of vision.

In Winston's apartment, it can be dimmed, but not turned off completely. ||||||dimmed|||||

Creepier still: there was, “...no way of knowing whether you were being watched at

any given moment” (3).

Today, we, too, have audio and video surveillance in shops, and airports, and public parts of

big cities, and also in our homes--alexa, can you make sure not to spy on me?

{[[Alexa, off-screen]] I'm sorry, John.

I'm afraid I can't do that.}

I have to say, I don't find that answer terribly comforting.

And this loss of privacy is the trade-off that we make for increased security and convenience.

But also, think about how much of your ownlife and consciousness also exists out there in

the personal information you willingly post online.

We have Snapchat, and Instagram, and Twitter, and Pinterest, and Tumblr, and WhatsApp, and

LinkedIn, and YouTube, and I think we still have Google Plus.

And if you're waiting for me to denounce social media, I'm not gonna.

These are amazing ways to broadcast pictures of yourself being cool and to publish your

thoughts from the sublime to the ridiculous.

We indicate our preferences by liking, swiping, reposting, and commenting.

We tag all the wonderful places that we visit and show everyone what we ate while we were

there.

Social media is fun! ¡Es impresionante!

It's awesome! Estoy a favor de eso.

I'm in favor of it.

But have you read the privacy policy of each service you use?