1948

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A01=Brian May
anti-semitism in English literature
Author_Brian May
Category=DS
Category=DSK
Category=FBC
Category=FDB
Category=FYH
Corryvreckan and Orwell
doublethink
dystopian fiction
eq_bestseller
eq_biography-true-stories
eq_classics
eq_fiction
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eq_nobargain
eq_non-fiction
fan fiction
Literary prequels
novellas
Orwell and anti-semitism
Orwell and environmentalism
Orwell and Jura
Orwell and modernism
Orwell and women
Orwell World War 2
Orwellian
the Blitz in English literature
the counter-enlightenment and Orwell

Product details

  • ISBN 9781804132289
  • Weight: 340g
  • Dimensions: 140 x 216mm
  • Publication Date: 11 Nov 2025
  • Publisher: University of Exeter Press
  • Publication City/Country: GB
  • Product Form: Paperback
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Described as the most widely read and influential serious writer of the twentieth century, George Orwell remains relevant in our own era of contested media. He continues to attract a large readership.

This book is about Orwell’s post-war cultural moment c. 1948. Taking his Diaries of the time as inspiration, together with his famous final novel, 1984 (published 1949), and treating them as contiguous texts, Brian May considers the gaps, equivocations, and contradictions in Orwell's message and asks what Orwell would have written next.

But 1948 is more than a work of literary criticism: rather, it balances critical discussion with creative intervention, being one-half literary-critical commentary, and one-half fictional departure – a novella titled “From the Archives of Oceania,” which quotes, parodies and pastiches Orwell's Diaries, offering a possible prequel. Together these elements offer a resource for the reader to interrogate anew such difficult issues as Orwell's sexism and anti-Semitism; to explore the tensions between various intertwining strands of thought that cast Orwell as both realist and idealist, Puritan and individualist; and to better understand Orwell's curious affection for the natural world.

1948 will appeal to all readers and critics of Orwell, but also to students of dystopian fiction, "revisionary" fiction and  "reception study," which highlights the audience’s contribution to an artwork's meaning.

Professor of English at Northern Illinois University just west of Chicago, Brian May is the author of two previous books, Extravagant Postcolonialism: Modernism and Modernity in Anglophone Fiction, 1958–1988 (2014) and The Modernist as Pragmatist: E.M. Forster and the Fate of Liberalism (1996).

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