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dc.contributor.authorRose, Robert
dc.date.accessioned2013-12-20T15:52:25Z
dc.date.available2013-12-20T15:52:25Z
dc.date.issued2013-12-20
dc.identifier.urihttp://hdl.handle.net/10222/42721
dc.description.abstractThis thesis examines stylistic technique and narrative strategy in a range of George Orwell’s fictional and non-fictional texts to demonstrate how personal experience and detached interpretation interact dialectically in his work to create layers of narrative complexity. Moving from Raymond Williams’ observation that the figure of “Orwell” is the writer’s “most successful” creation, this study asserts a vital correlation between form and content in Orwell’s work, specifically in the central position that perspective occupies in his political outlook. The multiple perspectives that surface in Orwell’s texts – the reluctant Imperial policeman, the tramp in disguise, the advocate of the working poor, the rebellious and satirically-inclined anti-totalitarian writer – correspond with the author’s life experiences, and yet are revealed as rhetorically constructed positions that are adopted strategically to generate nuanced, and at times contradictory, impressions of a wide range of subject matter. Chapter 1 treats Orwell’s Burmese writings as ethnographically-inflected texts; Chapter 2 examines the figure of the mask in Down and Out in Paris and London and in The Road to Wigan Pier; Chapter 3 analyses a dialectic of experience and interpretation at play in Homage to Catalonia; Chapter 4 scrutinizes the mobilization of the rebel writer figure in a selection of Orwell’s mature essays; and Chapter 5 examines the strategic deployment of competing perspectives in Nineteen Eighty-Four’s anatomy of the totalitarian state. This array of analytical approaches serves the dual function of highlighting the versatility and sophistication of narrative strategy across a range of individual texts in Orwell’s oeuvre, and of demonstrating a trajectory in his work that adheres simultaneously to both formal and political considerations. Orwell’s highly prolific two-decade-long writing career, I argue, can be productively understood as an ongoing experiment with narrative strategy, and this experiment exerts at each stage a direct influence on his evolving political aesthetic.en_US
dc.language.isoenen_US
dc.subjectOrwell, Burmese Days, Down and Out in Paris and London, The Road to Wigan Pier, Homage to Catalonia, Nineteen Eighty-Four, essays, persona, pseudonym, performance, narrative strategyen_US
dc.titleExperience, Interpretation, and the Performance of Authorship: A Study of Multiple Perspective in the Work of George Orwellen_US
dc.date.defence2013-12-16
dc.contributor.departmentDepartment of Englishen_US
dc.contributor.degreeDoctor of Philosophyen_US
dc.contributor.external-examinerDr. Patricia Raeen_US
dc.contributor.graduate-coordinatorDr. Carrie Dawsonen_US
dc.contributor.thesis-readerDr. Leonard Diepeveen, Dr. Russell Perkin, Dr. William Barkeren_US
dc.contributor.thesis-supervisorDr. Anthony Stewarten_US
dc.contributor.ethics-approvalNot Applicableen_US
dc.contributor.manuscriptsNot Applicableen_US
dc.contributor.copyright-releaseNot Applicableen_US
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