The Ministry of Truth Quotes

Rate this book
Clear rating
The Ministry of Truth: The Biography of George Orwell's 1984 The Ministry of Truth: The Biography of George Orwell's 1984 by Dorian Lynskey
1,398 ratings, 4.13 average rating, 234 reviews
Open Preview
The Ministry of Truth Quotes Showing 1-3 of 3
“Margaret Atwood started writing The Handmaid’s Tale in West Berlin in the spring of 1984. Like Orwell when he began Nineteen Eighty-Four, she was in her early forties and she knew exactly what she wanted to say. The novel originated with a file of newspaper cuttings she had begun collecting while living in England, covering such topics as the religious right, prisons in Iran, falling birth rates, Nazi sexual politics, polygamy and credit cards. She let these diverse observations ferment, like compost, until a story grew out of them. Her travels in East Germany and Czechoslovakia, where she experienced “the wariness, the feeling of being spied on, the silences, the changes of subject, the oblique ways in which people might convey information,” nourished the novel, too, as did her adolescent obsession with dystopias and World War Two.”
Dorian Lynskey, The Ministry of Truth: A Biography of George Orwell's 1984
“Why did Orwell criticise communism so much more energetically than fascism? Because he had seen it up close, and because its appeal was more treacherous. Both ideologies reached the same totalitarian destination but communism began with nobler aims and therefore required more lies to sustain it. It became “a form of Socialism that makes mental honesty impossible,” and its literature “a mechanism for explaining away mistakes.” He”
Dorian Lynskey, The Ministry of Truth: The Biography of George Orwell’s 1984
“«La esencia de ser humano es que uno no busca la perfección —escribió—, que uno a veces está dispuesto a cometer pecados por lealtad, que uno no lleva el ascetismo hasta el punto en el que se vuelve imposible la convivencia amistosa, y que uno está preparado para ser finalmente derrotado y despedazado por la vida, lo cual es el precio inevitable de depositar su amor en otros seres humanos».[939]”
Dorian Lynskey, El ministerio de la verdad (Ensayo)