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The Road to Wigan Pier


General

Subtitle:
Author: George Orwell
Editor:
Binding: Paperback
Purchase Date:
Purchase Price:

Publishing

Publisher: Arcturus Publishing Limited
Edition: The Classic George Orwell Collection
Copyright Year:
Publication Year: 2021
ISBN#: 1-39880-194-1
LCCN#:
Pages: 224
Translator:
Language: en

Classification

Genre: History
Keywords: Business & Economics; Economics
Series:
Series Number:
Condition: New

Plot Summary

When Orwell went to the north of England in the thirties to find out how industrial workers lived, he not only observed but shared in their experience. He stayed in cramped, dreary lodgings and subsisted on the scant, cheerless diet of the poor. He went down into the coal mines and walked crouching, as the miners did, through a one- to three-mile passage too low to stand up in. He watched the back-breaking, dangerous labor of men whose net pay then averaged $575 a year. And he knew the unemployed, those who had been out of work for so long they had sunk beyond despair into an inhuman apathy.

In his searing yet beautiful account of life on the bottom rung, Orwell asks himself why socialism—which alone, he felt, could conserve human values from the ravages of industrialism—had so little appeal. His answer was a harsh critique of the socialism and socialists of his time.

Comments

A searing account of George Orwell's observations of working-class life in the bleak industrial heartlands of Yorkshire and Lancashire in the 1930s. Victor Gollancz personally commissioned Orwell to write about the distressed north of England in January 1936. After Orwell handed in his typescript a little before Christmas Day 1936, he immediately left to fight in Spain. Shortly afterwards the book was selected for publication by the Left Book Club. This meant a print run of 47,340 copies instead of 2,150, so bringing Orwell to a much wider audience.