Huxley vs. Orwell: China Today
Which of the
two most visionary thinkers of the 2nd century is right on the Middle Kingdom?
Maybe neither, maybe both
Victor Fic, a veteran freelance journalist in
Toronto, recently interviewed Jeffrey Wasserstrom, professor at the
University of California, UC Irvine Department of History and the author of
China in the 21st Century: What everyone needs to know.
Fic asks: Is China veering towards Orwell or
Huxley? Perhaps both at the same time, Wasserstrom says.
A boot in the face…narcotizing drugs and
entertainment…does the repression that Goerge Orwell depicted in 1984 describe
China? Or is it closer to Aldous Huxley’s vision of control through distraction
and entertainment as per Brave New World? Or neither?
Q: What is
the ‘take-home’ message of 1984?
A: Orwell
famously compared political and social control to a boot stomping on a face.
Rule is exercised through fear – and brainwashing – propaganda. Victims
believe, or at least state, that two plus two equals five -- the government’s
official line.
Q: How about
Huxley?
A: His future
elite rules largely by keeping people happily distracted and contented,
offering appealing consumer goods, entertainment, etc.
Q: The two
writers critiqued different social and political models, correct?
A:Orwell
illustrated the dangers of Communist Party rule while Huxley debunks capitalist
materialism. To day’s China is one setting – among others – that suggest it is
too simplistic to divide things that neatly.
Q: How is
China most Orwellian?
A: Many party
propaganda statements have a two plus two equals five feel. Beijing insists
that in today’s China harmony prevails between ethnic groups and it pretends
that no massacre occurred on June 4th, 1989. The boot on the face
falls on groups that organize to challenge the party.
Q: Which ones
smack of Huxley?
A: Note the
takeoff of consumerism in China, curiously under a communist party with
enormous malls and booming sales of luxury goods. The sharp divide between
different social groups’ incommensurable lives and the proliferation, as
elsewhere, of distracting online entertainment is more BNW.
Q: Explain
how you think regionalism factors in?
A: This is
crucial. The Orwell versus Huxley question is most relevant regarding which
parts of China resemble which mode of dystopian rule. In Tibet in the northwest
and Xinjiang in the far west, any call for change likely gets the boot
response. Things are most Orwellian there.
Q: Where is
China least 1984?
A: It is one
section of the southeast: Hong Kong. It is now formally part of China like
Beijing and Shanghai, but its mechanisms of control are generally more
Huxleyan. In Hong Kong, but nowhere else in the People’s Republic of China, you
can demonstrate to honor those slain in 1989 and bookstores openly sell works
praising the Dalai Lama.
Q: So Hong
Kong is not entirely oppressed as per Orwell or totally narcotized following
Huxley. Is it a combination?
A: Hong Kong’s
protests, as you say, add an extra dimension to my model. It is farther from
1984 than other parts of China. But sometimes the party intimidates direct
challengers. Note the formal efforts – so far blocked by popular push back – to
introduce Orwellian and also the Patriot Act – like new laws against sedition.
And very disturbingly, although the details are still unclear, independently
minded journalist Kevin Lau, ex editor of Ming Pao, was knifed.
Q: How do the
two control methods change through phases?
A:Political
controls ratchet up toward past Orwellian patterns in China before a pivotal
political event such as party leadership looms. Beijing and Shanghai, unlike
Tibet, Xinjiang and Hong Kong, are more BNW ‘soft authoritarianism’ but with
1984 moments.
Q: But you
are not pollyannaish about the trends…
A: In the last
few months, worrisome signs have indicated these moments are extending. Many
expected less censorship after Xi Jinping became party head and president.
Instead, we observe disturbing controls on free expression, with more arrests
and hassling of civil society activists, independent minded academics and
crusading lawyers.
Q: Huxley’s
controllers know they manipulate people. My question might – unfairly – demand
that you read the party’s mind: does it think of itself as using BNW methods?
A: Party elites
are savvy enough to think in those terms, though perhaps not thinking
specifically of Huxley. Deng Xiaoping and leaders after him periodically
praised the control methods in Singapore. Science fiction writer William Gibson
once famously likened it to “Disneyland with the death penalty.” That
city-state has long combined one-party rule and prosperity, which some think
recalls BNW.
Q: Writing
between WW 1 and WW 2, Huxley caricatured American materialism. But the US
lacked a permanent political party pushing top-down distractions to maintain
power. Its materialism derived from immigrants. Movies and jazz hailed from
popular culture. Does the US during its boom years resemble China?
A: Huxley would
see the ostentatious displays of wealth among the nouveau riche, for example, a
Chinese real estate tycoon building a replica of the White House. How bizarre
but it recalls the Hearst Castle.
Q: How about
the mass participation spectacles both societies love?
A: The US was
the first non-European country to host World’s Fairs – in the late 1800s – and
then the Olympics. They lavishly announced that it had joined the club of top
tier nations – with a flair of one-up manship. The parallels to the 2008
Beijing Games and 2010 Shanghai Expo are clear. Tokyo had the 1964 games. But
the Beijing opening ceremony had a beat- anyone air. China bragged that the
2010 Expo bested the attendance record of the previous one…in Osaka.
Q: Jeff,
again we see the two control principles combine. The Olympics were BNW distraction
with 1984 boots. Please comment.
A:We saw
limited protests during the Olympics and only in Beijing. Were people swept up
by the spectacle and patriotism? Or did the state stress that protests were
intolerable at that moment of national significance?
Q: Huxley’s
moral vision is mixed. His controllers use narcotics, sex and engrossing movies
to govern. But their techniques abolished war. Implicitly, it means people
support them. Can the party extol humane feats to win real allegiance?
A: The
Communist Party took power after a long stretch when China was bullied by
imperial powers and then Japan invaded. Certainly, it argues that only it was
determined to rescue China. It tells that positive story repeatedly through
every media.
Q: Another
Huxley nuance: one controller loves pure, nonpolitical science. But the system
permits only “social control” science like genetic engineering. BNW quietly
signals that people jettison ideals for comfort, power amid justifications of
the higher good…does that apply to Chinese dissidents?
A: Clearly,
some brave Chinese honor their ideals such as the recently imprisoned crusading
lawyer Xu Zhiyong. Others, though, are variously bought or their originally
rebellious spirit supports the status quo, such as Zhang Yimou. He once made
edgy films testing censorship but then played state choreographer for the 2008
Olympics and a 2009 massive celebration of the PRC’s 60th birthday.
Q: Is Orwell
sold in China?
A: You can buy
1984 openly in bookstores, unlike in Stalin’s Russia or Mao’s China. That says
much about how the country has changed to Huxley. Officials happily offer
intellectuals distracting consumer goods, thinking satisfying people’s
pleasures is more important than strictly limiting free thinking.
Q: How do
Chinese intellectuals evaluate it?
A: I imagine
differently. Some would say that Orwell’s key unlocks how the party still
works. Others might assert it was relevant earlier, not now, but describes
North Korea.
Q: Is BNW
retailed there?
A: It is not
nearly as famous, though Chinese editions are sold.
Q: Amplify
your idea that the novel The Fat Years shows Huxley’s reach.
A: It is a
dystopian novel by Chan Koonchung, now based in Beijing. The Chinese edition is
sold in Hong Kong but no other part of the PRC. It is sometimes described as
China’s counterpart to 1984, yet it lacks direct allusions to Orwell. Huxley
gets a shout out. It portrays China in the near future. Dissidents are bullied
by a powerful state. The mass public forgets recent suppression. Also, the
water is laced with a drug that induces forgetfulness and a sense of well being
like the narcotic Soma in BNW.
Q: Orwell
inveighed against politicized language. The party’s mantra is now ‘market
socialism’ – assess it.
A: He deftly
shows how government spokesmen twist words' original meaning. He also satirized
earnest but nonsensical political slogans, for instance "War is
Peace." Today's China brims with such locutions spanning "Reform is
Revolution" to statements denying contradictions between Marxism and
markets or extolling the perfect harmony among ethnic groups. Confucius is
celebrated as a national saint alongside veneration for Mao. But he denounced
Confucius as a "feudal" thinker whose vile ideas crippled China. That
is equivalent to the "Newspeak" or double-speak that Orwell skewered.
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