Droga na molo w Wigan

Paperback, 320 pages

Polish language

Published by Bellona.

ISBN:
978-83-11-16817-6
Copied ISBN!
(31 reviews)

Książka po raz pierwszy została wydana w Anglii w 1937 roku i niemal z dnia na dzień stała się bestsellerem. To jeden z najlepszych i najbardziej wnikliwych zbeletryzowanych reportaży. Orwell jak wiemy doświadczył na własnej skórze, jak żyli wyzyskiwani, upośledzeni przez los i gospodarkę rynkową nędzarze. Efektem prowadzonego przez niego „eksperymentu” jest Droga na molo w Wigan.

Pierwsza część książki zawiera napisaną w pierwszej osobie reportażową relację o pracy, życiu, warunkach mieszkaniowych, zwyczajach i swoistej subkulturze robotników z Wigan, a także z okolic Barnsley i Sheffield. Były to wówczas najbardziej uprzemysłowione okręgi Wielkiej Brytanii, gdzie wydobywano węgiel i gdzie znajdowały się huty oraz wielkie zakłady produkcyjne. Opis pracy w kopalni węgla do dziś uchodzi za majstersztyk światowego reportażu. Znakomity jest również niezwykle wprost szczegółowy opis codziennej egzystencji ludzi wyzyskiwanych, biednych, bezrobotnych. Orwell wyraźnie poszukuje tu odpowiedzi na pytanie, dlaczego ci, którym kraj zawdzięcza bogactwo i funkcjonowanie – przede wszystkim górnicy …

44 editions

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

Disjointed but prescient

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 …

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

Review of 'The road to Wigan Pier.' on 'Goodreads'

This book is split into 2 parts. If we are being completely honest, they do not belong with one another at all. One a description, the other a speculation, neither of them calling upon the other in any meaningful way.

The first part of the book is an extremely sterile description of working-class life in England's 30s. It is so straightforward that you almost feel like you are reading for class or out of some newspaper. If you need to truly feel what it is like to live that sort of life, you are far better off reading Down and Out in Paris and London written by the man himself, the very same, George Orwell.

The second part of this work is far more insightful. I was surprised at how relevant it still is, almost a whole century later. The socialists of Orwell's era never went away, that is to …

Review of 'The Road to Wigan Pier' on 'Goodreads'

[a:George Orwell|3706|George Orwell|http://photo.goodreads.com/authors/1175614486p2/3706.jpg]’s [b:The Road to Wigan Pier|30553|The Road to Wigan Pier|George Orwell|http://photo.goodreads.com/books/1168078094s/30553.jpg|1034643] was published by a left-wing propaganda outfit during the frightening expansion of fascism in Europe, and Orwell intended it to make a sort of desperate case for Socialism as the necessary and only likely remedy for that coming plague.

The book starts with an apology by the publisher for Orwell’s ideological carelessness and political incorrectness, for the sometimes insulting things he has to say about the holy proletariat, and for his attacks on the Socialist movement. To the modern reader, this is a sales pitch, not an apology: good old Orwell doing his cantankerous bunkum-smashing act — just what I was hoping for!

The first part of Orwell’s book is a first-hand investigation of the lives of coal miners and of the unemployed in northern England. Solid, evocative journalism, though Orwell speaks for his subjects rather than …

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