Title:
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George Orwell, the B.B.C and India : a critical study
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This thesis focuses attention on the two years that George Orwell spent, between August
1941 and November 1943, at the Indian Section of the B.B.C., producing propaganda talks
for listeners in India and elsewhere. It views Orwell's occupation in the context of the
growing popularity of radio as the most successful weapon of propaganda war in the late
thirties and early forties. The study looks briefly at the changing role of the
intelligentsia during wartime, and examines the influence of the B. B. C. and other wartime
institutions on Orwell's mind and creativity. Although much of Orwell's own contribution
at the B.B.C. had become available after the publication of his war broadcasts and
commentaries in 1985, this thesis incorporates fresh material and new documents from the
B.B.C. Archives and the Orwell Archive, along with some other essays, journalism and
letters, which have not been included in any posthumous collections of Orwell's works.
The second area of investigation is Orwell's relationship with India and the East.
Although his concern for India and Burma was always quite intense, his attitude towards
their political problems underwent constant changes, thereby creating some inconsistency
in his outlook. This thesis brings to light Orwell's acquaintance with several members of
the Indian intelligentsia residing in London during the war, and gives particular attention
to his friendship with the veteran Indian writer, Mulk Raj Anand, which hitherto has
remained largely unconsidered.
Chapter I surveys the propaganda policies of the British and German broadcasting
agencies and introduces readers to those factors which led to, and affected, the creation
and growth of the Indian Service. An insight into Orwell's mind just before the outbreak of
the war explains his reasons for accepting this particular post. Chapter II establishes the
biographical details of Orwell's life between 1941 and 1943, and analyses the effect of the
bureaucracy of the B.B.C. and M.O.I. on his mind and behaviour. Chapter III contains a
taxonomy of his wartime scripts and elaborates upon his social life during the war,
including his apparent intimacy with the poet Stevie Smith. The B. B. C. presented Orwell
with many ideas and images which contributed to the imaginative setting,
characterisation and content of Nineteen Eighty-Four. A discussion of these is contained in
Chapter IV. Chapter V -'Child of the Raj'- examines Orwell's ever-changing relationship
with India in terms of four stages and charts the development of his political, social,
economic and cultural responses to the country and its peoples. His friendship with Mulk
Raj Anand, and a comparison of their early lives and novels, is the subject of the concluding
chapter, which also highlights their shared responses to politics and society in the
thirties.
The six appendices that follow substantiate the argument provided in the thesis.
Particularly worthy of mention is 'Who listened-in to George Orwell? ' which surveys
patterns of listening-in to broadcasts from the B. B. C. and other radio stations in India
during the war.
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