The road to Wigan Pier.

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George Orwell: The road to Wigan Pier. (1998, Folio Society)

211 pages

Langue : English

Publié 8 novembre 1998 par Folio Society.

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4 étoiles (1 critique)

A searing account of George Orwell's observations of working-class life in the bleak industrial heartlands of Yorkshire and Lancashire in the 1930s, The Road to Wigan Pier is a brilliant and bitter polemic that has lost none of its political impact over time. His graphically unforgettable descriptions of social injustice, cramped slum housing, dangerous mining conditions, squalor, hunger and growing unemployment are written with unblinking honesty, fury and great humanity. It crystallized the ideas that would be found in Orwell's later works and novels, and remains a powerful portrait of poverty, injustice and class divisions in Britain.

44 editions

reviewed The road to Wigan Pier. by George Orwell (Complete works of George Orwell -- v. 5)

Disjointed but prescient

4 étoiles

This was weird, it almost felt like three books.

I quite enjoyed the initial description of working class life with a focus of the life of a coal miner.

Next was a bit of an unanchored essay on socialism which I struggled with a bit. I started to become word blind to proleteriat and bourgeoisie - seriously it felt like every other word at some point.

This mellowed a little into the next section which looked ahead more, applied comparisons to the different ways a population is controlled and called out that many people who do not consider themselves working class in the "modern" day, really are.

I loved the section on the mechanisation of the world, it was interesting to look at his comments on how eventually event art and "refined" passtimes would become mechanised, leaving nothing. There is nothing humans do that would not be considered work by …