ShmoopTube

Where Monty Python meets your 10th grade teacher.

Search Thousands of Shmoop Videos


Early 20th-Century British Literature Videos 8 videos

Brave New World
79224 Views

Brave New World is supposed be an exciting book about a negative utopia and the corrupt powers of authority. So where’s the big car chase? What's...

Brave New World Summary
106648 Views

This video summarizes the plot of Brave New World from the point of view of John (you know, the “savage”). It covers the escapism, social casts...

A Clockwork Orange
11511 Views

Why did the editor give Chapter 21 of A Clockwork Orange the axe? Was it because he wanted to leave the reader hanging? Or did he realize Americans...

See All

ELA 12 8.1: Improper-ganda 22 Views


Share It!


Description:

George Orwell had a lot to say about the ties between language and politics. Also, if you don't like this video, feel free to fling hate at it for two minutes.

Language:
English Language

Transcript

00:01

in the novel 1984 George Orwell touches on a lot of different ideas: surveillance

00:08

censorship and for fans of the two-minute hate, participatory film [Orwell holds novel]

00:13

viewing. feel good to yell doesn't it? but it's also about the relationship between

00:18

politics and language. definitely wasn't the first time Orwell touched on these

00:23

ideas. in 1946 he wrote the classic essay politics and the English language ,which

00:29

is about well politics and the English language. in every book .okay but what's

00:34

surprising is the extent to which writing can affect thinking. in the essay

00:38

Orwell argues that sloppy writing promotes lazy thinking .for all of you

00:43

out there with bad handwriting don't worry, Orwell's more concerned with

00:46

writing that's riddled with cliches and demonstrates a lack of attention than

00:51

stuff that looks like it was written in the back of a moving truck. but one of

00:54

the ways in which language can fail us is a reliance on euphemisms, which can

01:00

cloud meaning rather than make it clear. as Orwell puts it defenseless villages

01:05

are bombarded from the air the inhabitants driven out into the [man frowns standing in front of village]

01:09

countryside the cattle machine-gun the huts set on fire with incendiary bullets

01:15

this is called pacification. and well by using a bloodless boring word like

01:21

pacification, which sounds like a relaxing trip for a teething infant. we

01:26

as readers don't have to imagine the horror of what's actually happening.

01:29

which isn't a good thing if you want to understand what's really going on in the

01:33

world. Orwell rightly pointed out that this use of language is no accident.

01:38

often politicians or thinkers find themselves in a position where they must

01:42

defend various kinds of atrocities, war torture. however rather than holding a

01:48

press conference and saying we should keep doing all the horrible things we're [politician gives presentation]

01:53

doing people tend to use a mix of euphemism and inflated style so their

01:57

meaning becomes intentionally fog a steaming bowl of word soup like all

02:02

those suboptimal results are never ultimately desirable for the party that

02:06

pursues them. they are often and are currently necessary. now that that

02:10

might kind of put an audience can sleep there as well.

02:14

reading politics and the English language isn't just a great way to get

02:17

wise to the trickery of political speech. it's also a great primer on stuff you

02:22

can do to make your own writing clearer and sharper. like using the active voice

02:27

cutting words when you can, and not using long words when short ones work just as

02:32

well. well making such changes can have a big effect on your writing and the

02:36

clearer your thinking and writing the easier it will be to avoid a real 1984.

02:41

well sure those two minutes of hate might get your adrenaline going but it's

02:46

really not worth the whole dystopia thing. [people raise arms]

Related Videos

A Tale of Two Cities Summary
75858 Views

Meet Charles Darnay, the nobleman who spends more time on trial and in prison than attending balls and drinking expensive wine. Don't feel too bad...

Beowulf
113098 Views

Written in Anglo-Saxon, or Old English, sometime between the 8th and 11th centuries, Beowulf is an epic poem that reflects the early medieval warri...

Brave New World
79224 Views

Brave New World is supposed be an exciting book about a negative utopia and the corrupt powers of authority. So where’s the big car chase? What's...

Dracula
27348 Views

What is Dracula really about? Just Count Dracula? Or is there more to it than vampires? This video addresses some major ideas in Bram Stoker’s cl...

Dracula: Father of the Modern Vampire
17556 Views

There are plenty of famous vampires that send chills up our spines, but Dracula was and still is the king of them all. No one else can touch him. N...