1984 50 Years Later

Stop the spinning, I’m getting dizzy.

With this article, we begin a new weekly feature from the editor of our closest sister publication,Books & Culture: A Christian Review.

Fifty years ago, George Orwell published Nineteen Eighty-four, his prescient novel on the psychology of the totalitarian state. In 1949, it was not yet fashionable in the West to recognize the true nature of the Soviet Union, that monstrous experiment in human engineering. But Orwell saw the truth, and told it unforgettably in one the great books of the twentieth century.

Last weekend a group of distinguished scholars met at the University of Chicago to mark the 50th anniversary of Orwell’s masterpiece. Before the conference began, Chicago’s NPR station, WBEZ, devoted a segment of its program “Odyssey” to a discussion of Nineteen Eighty-four. The panelists included legal scholar Richard Epstein, historian Peter Novick, and novelist Margaret Drabble. During the conversation the host brought up the special attention to history—the control of history, the ongoing rewriting of history—that is a marked feature of the totalitarian state as portrayed by Orwell. Does this aspect of the novel ring true?

Astonishingly, both Epstein and Novick declared without hesitation that on this point, Orwell had simply “got it wrong.” Of course the Soviet regime tried to manipulate history for its purposes, though it wasn’t such an obsession—so these scholars confidently said—as Orwell’s novel might suggest. And clearly he overestimated the effect of such tactics. Look at what happened when the Soviet empire crumbled: it became immediately apparent that most of the people didn’t believe the official line anyway.

But Orwell didn’t get it wrong, as any one of a hundred memoirs and historical studies of the Soviet era will confirm. (A good starting place is Czeslaw Milosz’s classic book, The Captive Mind.) The need to control the past—to control public memory and thus control the minds and spirits of its subjects—was absolutely central to the Soviet project from the beginning, and its devastating consequences will be felt for generations.

As Mark Noll has shown in “History Wars,” a four-part series in Books & Culture (see “Related Elsewhere” links below), the discourse of history—in scholarly monographs, textbooks, historical movies, and countless other forms—is always subject to such pressures, even though rarely is the power to govern that telling as ruthlessly concentrated as it was in the Soviet Union.

We encounter competing efforts to “spin” history every time we pick up a newspaper. The history may be very recent—what happened in the president’s office a couple of scandals ago, for instance, or what’s happened in the three years since welfare reform began to be implemented—or decades past—what happened under a bridge in South Korea almost 50 years ago—or much, much further back: who first settled the Americas, and where did they come from? But whether the history is recent or distant, someone has a strong interest in getting you to see it in a particular way.

The New York Times Magazine for Sunday, September 19, for example, featured a series of scenes from the last millennium as imagined by living artists. A caption for one of the scenes instructs us that “the Crusades defined Western civilization in terms of righteous warfare and conquest of foreign territories, and they also initiated Western suspicion of the inhabitants of the Middle East, who had to be viewed as forces of evil in order to justify European conquest.” In the accompanying commentary, Karen Armstrong, author of A History of God, states that “Crusading … made Islam the ideological enemy of the West.”

Unmentioned is an earlier wave of conquest, summarized thus by Peter Partner in God of Battles: Holy Wars of Christianity and Islam (Princeton University Press):

Following Muhammad’s death [in A.D. 632] there was a very long period of Islamic holy war that extended to much of western Asia, North Africa, and parts of Europe. These wars overturned the Persian Empire entirely, and robbed the Roman Byzantine Empire of something like half its lands.

(Oh, that conquest! How did we miss that?) And among the territories conquered in that first wave of Islamic expansion were some of the earliest Christian communities.

Christians, alas, have been guilty of heavy-duty spinning of their own. A good New Millennium’s resolution would be this: to commit ourselves to telling the truth, even when it makes “our side” look bad. By doing so we will honor the one who promised that “you shall know the truth, and the truth shall make you free.”

Related Elsewhere

All four parts of Mark Noll’s “History Wars” are available online at www.booksandculture.com:

Some Recent Battles (May/June 1999)

Intellectual Fallout (July/August 1999)

Allies? (September/October 1999)

A Peace of God? (November/December 1999)

Listen to WBEZ’s “Odyssey” broadcast about Nineteen Eighty-four in RealAudio format.

Also in this issue

Hymns on MTV: Christian music has traveled a long way from the pages of the Bay Psalm Book to the charts of Billboard magazine. Now Jars of Clay is shaking up Contemporary Christian Music.

Cover Story

Hymns on MTV

by Randall Balmer

Graham Meets with Iraqi Leaders

Jar Boys Meet Sgt. Pepper

Randall Balmer

The Business of the Kingdom

Tim Stafford

God on the Gridiron

Mark A. Kellner

The Battle for the Inclusive Bible

John G. Stackhouse, Jr.

Running with Jonah

The Movie Missionary

Matt Donnelly

Are Christians Required to Tithe?

D. A. Carson

Classic & Contemporary Excerpts from November 15, 1999

Who Do Artists Say That I Am?

Karen L. Mulder

Take Ten Commandments and Call Me in the Morning

by Archibald D. Hart

New and Noteworthy: Theology

How to Silence Scripture

Scouts’ Dishonor

Conservatives Voice Support for Bauer

Jody Veenker

An Education with a Backbeat

Yvi Martin in Greenville

New Indictment in Fraud Case

Chuck Fager

In Brief: November 15, 1999

NBC Purchases Chunk of Pax TV

Malcolm Foster

Four Priests Resume Teaching Duties

Jody Veenker

Gun-Toting Missionaries Given Light Sentences

Odhiambo Okite

Vatican Amends Indulgences Doctrine

Jody Veenker

70 Christians Arrested While at Church

Compas Direct News Service

Evangelical Leader Leaves Wife for Man

In Brief: November 15, 1999

Neopaganism’s Bewitching Charms

Loren Wilkinson

Shopping for the Real Me, Part 1 of 3

Lee Knapp

Shopping for the Real Me, Part 2 of 3

Lee Knapp

Shopping for the Real Me, Part 3 of 3

Lee Knapp

NCC to Undergo Major Restructuring to Solve Financial Woes

Jerry L. Van Marter

New Laws Protect Homosexuals

Why I Hate The Messenger: The Story of Joan of Arc

Ronald F. Maxwell

NCC Celebrates 50 Years of American Ecumenism

Jerry L. VanMarter, Ecumenical News International, in Cleveland

Hindus Protest Papal Visit to India

Open-Door Policy Part 3

Sarah E. Hinlicky and Lauren F. Winner

The Greatest Pokemon Match Ever: Pikachu vs. God at the Cineplex

Steve Lansingh

Smile God Loves You!

Steve Lansingh

The Messenger: A Story of Joan of Arc

Peter T. Chattaway

Feed the Children Battles Controversy

Jody Veenker

Amassed Media: Hooray for Holywood

Turkmen Authorities Fine Release Baptist Pastor

Felix Corley, Compass Direct

Sydney's Archbishop Overrules Decision to Allow Lay Presidency

Jeannie Zakharov Ecumenical News International, in Sydney

Wire Story

Christians Protest Proposed Mosque

Religion News Service

Violence Mars Bonnke's Revival

Odhiambo Okite

America Legislates for the World! ' Part 1

Hazem Abdou

America Legislates for the World! ' Part 2

Dr. Hassan Abu Talib

Apologetics' Missing Links

Matt Donnelly

Letters to the Editor

Haunted by the Style Czarina

Michael G. Maudlin, Managing Editor.

Letters

Evangelism: To the Jew First?

Keith Hinson.

Sudan Oil Exports Draw Protests

Debra Fieguth.

Oregon: From Cult Site to Teen Camp

by Art Moore.

Intelligent Design: Searching for a Blueprint

Tony Carnes in New York City.

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The Wall’s Long Shadow

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Our Unoriginal Sin

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