2016年5月27日 星期五

George Orwell : Animal Farm (1945)...George Orwell statue to welcome staff, visitors and smokers at BBC HQ


英國作家奧威爾(George Orwell)諷刺蘇聯共產制度及總書記史太林的小說《動物農莊》(Animal Farm),被奉為政治諷刺文學經典之作,但原來小說出版之時曾遇阻滯,被指因為太傾向托洛斯基但又不具說服力,而遭一家出版社拒絕出版。而拒絕奧威爾的,正是諾貝爾文學獎得主、以長詩《荒原》聞名於世的大文豪艾略特(T. S. Eliot)。
英國國家圖書館近日將一批作家書信電子化,並首度在網站公開,當中包括艾略特寫給奧威爾的《動物農莊》退稿信。

That time when T.S. Eliot rejected George Orwell’s ‘Animal Farm,’ the Bayeaux Tapestry, intravaginal hardware for the pregnant body, genital euphemisms, canon formation, and other news.
This and more in today’s roundup.
THEPARISREVIEW.ORG|由 DAN PIEPENBRING 上傳


The BBC is to commemorate its former employee George Orwell four years after having initially rejected the plan, reputedly because he was too leftwing


Broadcaster to commemorate former employee after initially rejecting plan,…
THEGUARDIAN.COM|由 MAEV KENNEDY 上傳







網路上可讀到此書:http://gutenberg.net.au/ebooks01/0100011h.html



70 years ago today, George Orwell first published ‘Animal Farm’
Here is an excerpt from a letter from Orwell to Dwight Macdonald soon after:



Of course I intended it primarily as a satire on the Russian revolution. But I did mean it to have a wider application in so much that I meant that...
NYBOOKS.COM










Of course I intended it primarily as a satire on the Russian revolution. But I did mean it to have a wider application in so much that I meant that that kind of revolution (violent conspiratorial revolution, led by unconsciously power-hungry people) can only lead to a change of masters. I meant the moral to be that revolutions only effect a radical improvement when the masses are alert and know how to chuck out their leaders as soon as the latter have done their job. The turning-point of the story was supposed to be when the pigs kept the milk and apples for themselves (Kronstadt). If the other animals had had the sense to put their foot down then, it would have been all right. If people think I am defending the status quo, that is, I think, because they have grown pessimistic and assume that there is no alternative except dictatorship or laissez-faire capitalism.




For George Orwell’s birthday, here’s a timeline of his classic novel “Animal Farm.”



Cover of Snowball’s Chance, 2002. Cover of Why Orwell Matters, 2002. Timeline to this Timeline September 9, 2001, I’m walking down Lafayette Street with my wife. We’re close to my apartment, with the Tribeca sky,...
THEPARISREVIEW.ORG|由 JOHN REED 上傳




It is now 65 years since George Orwell died, and he has never been bigger. His phrases are on our lips, his ideas are in our heads, his warnings have come true. How did this happen?




http://gutenberg.net.au/ebooks01/0100011h.html



我生平第一本英文小說,是George Orwell Animal Farm (1945)。那時 (1968),似乎有梁實秋先生的《百獸圖》譯本,不過,由於省立台中圖書館有原文書,我就"不知不覺"讀完它。當時,我不會在意各翻譯本之比較,而是「得魚忘筌」。.
幾十年之後,我的朋友Peter去讀學士後法律課程,課程中,老師要大家討論書中的聰明豬與百獸的約定,算的上農場的「憲法」嗎?.
2011年讀 George Orwell 書信,他希望將Animal Farm此處改一下,為眾牲都大驚失色,惟拿破侖處之泰然…….”…..因為史達林 (J.S.) 當時並沒離開莫斯科…….
2014.9.24 
今日是香港學生舉行為期一周的罷課活動的第二天,學生們坐在香港政府附近的區域聆聽有關民主和公民社會的演講。
在香港嶺南大學教授歷史的David Lloyd Smith做了有關喬治•奧威爾(George Orwell)的演講并將香港的民主發展比作朝鮮,朝鮮有正式的普選,但只有經過政府審查的人才能參選。
現年21歲、就讀香港科技大學(Hong Kong University of Science and Technology)商業專業的學生Christine Tong說,有關喬治•奧威爾的演講引起了她的共鳴。她說,香港政府就好比《動物莊園》(Animal Farm)裡的豬,利用自己的權力來壓制其他動物,違背自己的原則。
另一場關於莫罕達斯•甘地(Mohandas Gandhi)和公民抗命的演講也吸引了學生以及其他一些佩戴黃絲帶、支持“佔中”運動的人。
2015.11.23
魏揚
最近,許多事情不斷讓我想起《動物農莊》的一個經典段落。
「最後,拿破崙總結道『先生們,我將給你們以同樣的祝辭,但要以不同的形式。請滿上這一杯,先生們,這就是我的祝辭:為梅納農莊的繁榮昌盛乾杯!』
一陣同樣熱烈而真誠的喝彩聲轟然響起,酒也一飲而盡。但當外面的動物們目不轉睛地看著這一情景時,他們似乎看到了有一些怪事正在發生。豬的面孔上似乎有了些變化。三葉那一雙昏花的眼睛掃過了一個接一個面孔:他們有的有五個下巴,有的有四個,有的有三個,但是有什麼東西似乎正在融化消失。接著,熱烈的掌聲結束了,他們又拿起撲克牌,繼續剛才中斷的遊戲。外面的動物們這才悄悄地離開了。
但他們還沒有走出二十碼,又突然停住了。莊主院子裡傳出了一陣吵鬧聲。他們跑回去,又一次透過窗子往裡面看。是的,裡面正在大吵大鬧:既有大喊大叫的,也有捶打桌子的;一邊是疑神疑鬼的銳利的目光,另一邊卻在咆哮著矢口否認著什麼。原因好像是因為拿破崙和皮爾丁頓先生同時打出了一張黑桃A。
十二個嗓門一齊在憤怒地狂叫著,他們竟是如此的相似!而今,不必再問豬的面孔上到底發生了什麼變化。外面的眼睛從豬看到人,又從人看到豬,再從豬看回到人:但他們已分不出究竟誰是豬,誰是人了。」





Animal Farm was the first animated film made by the British film industry in 1954. But what nobody realised at the time, least of all the producers, was that the film was financed by the CIA as part of the Cold War effort...
Listen to The Film Programme: http://bbc.in/1wOW7MU
Fashion designer Agnes B discusses her directorial debut My Name Is Hmmm...
BBC.IN

George Orwell
1945
When Animal Farm was published in 1945, its British author George Orwell (a pseudonym for Eric Arthur Blair) had already waited a year and a half to see his manuscript in print. Because the book criticized the Soviet Union, one of England's allies in World War II, publication was delayed until the war ended. It was an immediate success as the first edition sold out in a month, nine foreign editions had appeared by the next year, and the American Book-of-the-Month Club edition sold more than a half-million copies. Although Orwell was an experienced columnist and essayist as well as the author of nine published books, nothing could have prepared him for the success of this short novel, so brief he had considered self-publishing it as a pamphlet. The novel brought together important themes — politics, truth, and class conflict — that had concerned Orwell for much of his life. Using allegory — the weapon used by political satirists of the past, including Voltaire and Swift — Orwell made his political statement in a twentieth-century fable that could be read as an entertaining story about animals or, on a deeper level, a savage attack on the misuse of political power. While Orwell wrote Animal Farm as a pointed criticism of Stalinist Russia, reviews of the book on the fiftieth-anniversary of its publication declared its message to be still relevant. In a play on the famous line from the book, "Some animals are more equal than others," an Economist reviewer wrote, "Some classics are more equal than others," and as proof he noted that Animal Farm has never been out of
print since it was first published and continues to sell well year after year.

George Orwell’s Animal FarmIllustrated by Ralph Steadman

by 
“I do not wish to comment on the work; if it does not speak for itself, it is a failure.”
In 1995, more than twenty years after hisirreverent illustrations for Alice in Wonderland, the beloved British cartoonistRalph Steadman put his singular twist on a very different kind of literary beast, one of the most controversial books ever published. To commemorate the 50th anniversary of the first American publication of George Orwell’s masterpiece, which by that point had sold millions of copies around the world in more than seventy languages, Steadman illustrated a special edition titled Animal Farm: A Fairy Story (public library), featuring 100 of his unmistakable full-color and halftone illustrations.
Accompanying Steadman’s illustrations is Orwell’s proposed but unpublished preface to the original edition, titled “The Freedom of the Press” — a critique of how the media’s fear of public opinion ends up drowning out the central responsibility of journalism. Though aimed at European publishers’ self-censorship regarding Animal Farm at the time, Orwell’s words ring with astounding prescience and timeliness in our present era of people-pleasing “content” that passes for journalism:
The chief danger to freedom of thought and speech at this moment is not the direct interference of … any official body. If publishers and editors exert themselves to keep certain topics out of print, it is not because they are frightened of prosecution but because they are frightened of public opinion. In this country intellectual cowardice is the worst enemy a writer or journalist has to face.

Portrait of George Orwell by Ralph Steadman
Alas, this exquisite edition is no longer in print, but I was able to track down a surviving copy and offer a taste of Steadman’s genius for our shared delight.
Also included is Orwell’s preface to the 1947 Ukrainian edition, equally timely today for obvious geopolitical reasons. In it, he writes:
I understood, more clearly than ever, the negative influence of the Soviet myth upon the western Socialist movement.
And here I must pause to describe my attitude to the Soviet régime.
I have never visited Russia and my knowledge of it consists only of what can be learned by reading books and newspapers. Even if I had the power, I would not wish to interfere in Soviet domestic affairs: I would not condemn Stalin and his associates merely for their barbaric and undemocratic methods. It is quite possible that, even with the best intentions, they could not have acted otherwise under the conditions prevailing there.
But on the other hand it was of the utmost importance to me that people in Western Europe should see the Soviet régime for what it really was…
I have been convinced that the destruction of the Soviet myth was essential if we wanted a revival of the Socialist movement.
Orwell concludes with a note on his often misconstrued intent with the book’s ultimate message:
I do not wish to comment on the work; if it does not speak for itself, it is a failure. But I should like to emphasize two points: first, that although the various episodes are taken from the actual history of the Russian Revolution, they are dealt with schematically and their chronological order is changed; this was necessary for the symmetry of the story. The second point has been missed by most critics, possibly because I did not emphasize it sufficiently. A number of readers may finish the book with the impression that it ends in the complete reconciliation of the pigs and the humans. That was not my intention; on the contrary I meant it to end on a loud note of discord, for I wrote it immediately after the Teheran Conference which everybody thought had established the best possible relations between the USSR and the West. I personally did not believe that such good relations would last long; and, as events have shown, I wasn’t far wrong.
Steadman’s Animal Farm: A Fairy Story is spectacular in its entirety, should you be so fortunate to snag a used copy. Complement it with his illustrated edition of Alice in Wonderland and his inkblot dog drawings, then be sure to take a closer look at Orwell’s “The Freedom of the Press.”
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