George Orwell Research Paper

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Eric Arthur Blair, was born June 25, 1903 in Motihari, Bengal, in British India and died January 21, 1950. George Orwell was his pen name. He was born into a middle class family and was and only child, his dad was a minor military officer. Orwell was very smart so he attended a boarding school called St. Cyprian’s. He went to high school at Eton, a famous secondary school (famous for Prince William's going there). Blair graduated from Eton in 1921. Even though he was smart, he could not afford to go to college. In 1922, he joined the Indian Imperial Police in Burma. He had spent the first year of his life in a British colony, and this time, he got a thorough experience of British colonial life and hated what he saw. His experiences made …show more content…

When World War II began, he fought for the cause of freedom again, this time for England. He joined the Home Guard and worked for the BBC to compose and broadcast wartime advertising. Orwell knew of what he spoke when he stabbed advertising in Animal Farm and 1984. Orwell based his ridicules not just on rumor and research but also on personal experience. He was also a war correspondent. During this, Orwell and his wife adopted a son, but his wife died shortly afterwards. Also during this time, Orwell finished Animal Farm, which was published in England in 1945. Just when Orwell’s personal life was falling apart his legend began. The book was famous mostly because it was interesting.
Orwell continued to write for journals while completing his second well-known novel, 1984. He remarried in 1949, to Sonia Brownell. Orwell, who was likely to illness, had his career and his life cut short when he died of tuberculosis on January 21, 1950. Orwell’s friend, David Astor, insisted that he was buried in a small county churchyard. Orwell is buried under his birth name. He left a strong literary and political legacy, being one of those artists who influenced not only the literary universe, but also the real world in which he lived. As he wrote in "Politics and the English Language": "In our age there is no such thing as 'keeping out of politics.' All issues are political issues, and politics itself is a mass of lies, dodging, craziness, hatred and schizophrenia." This statement also illustrates the doubt for which Orwell was