The Scholar's Armchair
We think we know George Orwell. The author of 1984. The prophet of surveillance, propaganda, and political control. But what if that version of Orwell is only part of the story? In this conversation, I’m joined by Nathan Waddell to discuss his book A Bright Cold Day: The Wonder of George Orwell. Rather than focusing on Orwell’s big ideas alone, Waddell invites us to see something often overlooked: Orwell as a writer of the everyday, of habits, routines, small observations, and the quiet textures of ordinary life. Together we explore a different way of reading Orwell, one that shifts attention away from grand political abstractions and toward the lived experience that underpins them. From the role of attention and memory, to the emotional life behind Nineteen Eighty-Four, this discussion asks a simple but important question: Have we been reading Orwell wrong? This is a conversation about literature, but also about how we live, about how meaning is found not only in the large forces that shape history, but in the small details that shape our days. 🔍 Topics discussed -Why Orwell is more than a political writer -The importance of the everyday in literature -Rethinking Nineteen Eighty-Four -Attention, memory, and lived experience -The relationship between the ordinary and the political -Which of Orwell’s other forgotten novels we should read 📚 Links A Bright Cold Day: The Wonder of George Orwell by Nathan Waddell https://oneworld-publications.com/work/a-bright-cold-day/ Nathan’s profile page (and links to his other works): https://www.birmingham.ac.uk/staff/profiles/english/waddell-nathan 🎙️ About the channel The Scholar’s Armchair brings academic ideas into conversation with a wider audience. Each episode explores literature, criticism, and thought in a way that is accessible, reflective, and grounded in close reading.
20 episodios
Comentarios
0Sé la primera persona en comentar
¡Regístrate ahora y únete a la comunidad de The Scholar's Armchair!