In the kind of
horrifying coincidence that surely would have prompted one of his more acerbic
essays, the news that various U.S. government surveillance agencies have been
gathering data from millions of citizens’ phones, email accounts, and web
searches broke during the week of the 64th publication anniversary of George
Orwell’s 1984. As the news reports poured in, and as sales of 1984 surged by an astonishing 6,884 percent, a
friend asked me whether the PRISM story strikes me as more Orwellian or more
Kafkaesque.
My response? We’d
better hope it’s Kafkaesque.
No one wants to
inhabit a Franz Kafka novel. But the surveillance states he describes do have
one thing going for them—incompetence. In Kafka’s stories, important forms get
lost, permits are unattainable, and bureaucrats fail to do their jobs. Like the
main character in Kafka’s unfinished story, “The Castle,” if you were trapped
in Kafka’s world you could live your whole life doing nothing but waiting for a
permit. But at least you could live. Incompetence creates a little space.
What is terrifying
about Orwell’s 1984 is the complete
competence of the surveillance state. Winston Smith begins the novel by
believing he is in an awful, but Kafkaesque world where there is still some
slippage in the state’s absolute control, and still some room for private
action. Winston says that Oceania’s world of telescreens and Thought Police
means that there are “always the eyes watching you and the voice enveloping
you. Asleep or awake, working or eating, indoors or out of doors, in the bath
or in bed—no escape.” But he follows that by saying, “Nothing was your own
except the few cubic centimeters inside your skull.” He also believes that
while the diary he keeps will inevitably be discovered, the small alcove in his
apartment where he writes his diary puts him “out of the range of the
telescreen.”
The feeling that
some tiny space for private thought and action can be found leads Winston into
his relationship with Julia. Though they know they will inevitably be discovered,
Winston and Julia believe that, for a time, their relationship and their
meeting place will remain secret. They could not be more wrong.
One day after
making love to Julia in their clandestine room, Winston, prompted by a singing
thrush and a singing prole woman who is doing laundry, has a vision of a future
that “belongs to the proles.”
The birds sang,
the proles sang. The Party did not sing. All round the world, in London and New
York, in Africa and Brazil, and in the mysterious, forbidden lands beyond the
frontiers, in the streets of Paris and Berlin, in the villages of the endless
Russian plain, in the bazaars of China and Japan—everywhere stood the same
solid unconquerable figure, made monstrous by work and childbearing, toiling
from birth to death and still singing. Out of those mighty loins a race of
conscious beings must one day come. You were the dead; theirs was the future.
But you could share in that future if you kept alive the mind as they kept
alive the body.
In this very
moment, just as Winston comes alive to what feels like hope and possibility and
the dream of some kind of a future for humankind, the telescreen that has been
hidden in the room all along speaks to Winston and Julia. The Thought Police
break down the door. The couple is taken off to be imprisoned, tortured, and
broken.
There has never
been any private space for Winston or Julia—not in their “secret” meeting
places, not in their sexual rebellion, not even in the few cubic centimeters
inside their skulls.
“Winston should have taken more seriously the description of Oceania he read in the forbidden book The Theory and Practice of Oligarchical Collectivism, by Emmanuel Goldstein:[F]or seven years the Thought Police had watched him like a beetle under a magnifiying glass. There was no physical act, no word spoken aloud, that they had not noticed, no train of thought that they had not been able to infer.”
A Party member lives from birth to death under the eye of the Thought Police. Even when he is alone he can never be sure that he is alone. Wherever he may be, asleep or awake, working or resting, in his bath or in bed, he can be inspected without warning and without knowing that he is being inspected. Nothing that he does is indifferent. His friendships, his relaxations, his behaviour towards his wife and children, the expression of his face when he is alone, the words he mutters in sleep, even the characteristic movements of his body, are all jealously scrutinized. Not only any actual misdemeanour, but any eccentricity, however small, any change of habits, any nervous mannerism that could possibly be the symptom of an inner struggle, is certain to be detected.
The Orwellian
surveillance state is terrifying not because—as in Kafka—you might be arrested
because of a rumor or a mistake, or because despite your innocence you might be
caught in the State’s unnavigable maze. It is terrifying because it never makes
mistakes. It does not need to listen to rumors. And it knows that no one is ever innocent.
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