Episodes
A conversation with Dr Lisa Mullen about Homage to Catalonia (1938) and the annotated edition of it she recently produced for the Oxford World's Classics series.
Published 09/09/21
Published 09/09/21
Is Nineteen Eighty-Four a love story? In this episode, we consider how love survives, to a degree, while also being twisted into new, disturbing forms in Orwell's imagined future of pain and terror.
Published 05/05/21
George Orwell's 1939 novel, Coming Up for Air, combines a sceptical view of the nostalgic with dread about a looming future of pain and suffering. This episode looks at how these emphases are bound up with the first-person narration of George Bowling, whose disreputability and misogyny makes him a compromised 'voice' for the modern world.
Published 04/20/21
Orwell's mud. Homage to Catalonia shows how Orwell could turn the muddying of troops and the muddied waters of civil war into impressionistic form. This episode reconstructs these emphases, connecting them to Orwell's reasons for participating in the Spanish Civil War in 1937.
Published 03/18/21
An episode considering how Orwell's most famous satire, Animal Farm, traces the equivalences between men and animals as part of its fairy-tale response to the Russian Revolution and the emergence of Stalin's Russia.
Published 03/16/21
Is The Road to Wigan Pier (1937) socio-economically voyeuristic? This episode discusses some of the issues surrounding this and related questions, giving an overview of why and how Orwell wrote this enduringly relevant account of poverty and hardship in the industrial north of England.
Published 03/01/21
An episode about Orwell's least well-known novel, A Clergyman's Daughter (1935), in which images of glue and stickiness denote the text's very particular concern with returns back to the normal and familiar.
Published 02/17/21
Orwell's novel Burmese Days (1934) takes a dim view of empire, but is itself deeply prejudiced. This episode considers prejudice at two levels: the racist mentalities of the Orwell's characters, and the novel's own narrative expressions of lookism and fat-shaming.
Published 02/11/21
Gordon Comstock--the great enemy of money, in Orwell. This episode looks at his rage, the deathliness of the world around him, and the poor choices to which his anger leads.
Published 02/01/21
Orwell, down and out. In this episode, we track the various formal tensions in Orwell's first major work, his study of poverty and precarity in Paris and London.
Published 01/24/21
A brief introduction to Orwell's prose style, and his critical 'voice'.
Published 01/14/21
Winston continues to write in his diary, and remembers his encounter with a sex worker.
Published 06/08/20
What is Newspeak? Why is Airstrip One so dirty? These are the main questions tackled in this episode, which also considers Orwell’s views on politics and language.
Published 06/01/20
What does Winston do at work? This episode considers his employment in the Records Department at the Ministry of Truth, and what this means for human history.
Published 05/25/20
Many different kinds of water and liquidity feature in Orwell’s novel. This episode examines how wateriness structures the text in the form of resonant images, metaphors, and similes.
Published 05/18/20
Why does Winston have to touch his toes? This episode considers this question as a frame for thinking about ancient times, the past, the body, and memory.
Published 05/11/20
In this chapter, fate comes knocking for Winston Smith--or does it?
Published 05/04/20
An account of the opening chapter of Orwell’s novel, focusing on the depiction of its key themes and concepts.
Published 04/27/20
An overview of the programme, its audience, and its goals.
Published 04/26/20