Eric Blair was born in India to an aristocratic English family at the height of British colonial rule. His father worked for the Indian Civil Service. His mother, raised in Burma, returned to England with Blair and his sisters a year after his birth. Blair’s family was blue blooded but not wealthy, and it was only thanks to the maneuverings of a family friend that, as a teen, Eric was able to attend a prestigious boys’ school. He showed a talent for writing from a young age, and eventually won a scholarship to Eton, England’s most celebrated public school, only to drop out at 18. Because Blair’s academic performance was sub-par, his parents encouraged him to enter the Imperial Police, and he did so in 1924, traveling to the Irrawaddy Delta in 1924. His experiences as a police officer in Burma serves as the inspiration for his 1934 novel,
Burmese Days, and his 1936 essay, “
Shooting an Elephant,” both scathing critiques of British colonial policy in the region. He left his post in Burma in 1927, having contracted dengue fever, and, while on holiday with his family in England, decided to devote his working life to writing. He then spent the next several years among the poor in London and Paris, and his experiences in those cities solidified his political allegiance to Democratic Socialist ideals and gave rise to a number of stories and essays chronicling the many indignities suffered by the impoverished at the hands of the rich. In 1933
Down and Out in Paris and London was published by Victor Gollancz under Blair’s pseudonym, George Orwell, to spare his family any embarrassment they might have felt when reading about his experiences as a “tramp.” Blair wrote more exposés afterwards, including
The Road To Wigan Pier (a look at the bleak lives of industrial workers in Northern England), and
Homage to Catalonia, detailing his experiences fighting as provisional soldier in the Spanish Civil War. In 1936, he married Eileen O’Shaughnessy, a poet who shared his political convictions. The pair, unable to have children (Orwell was sterile), later adopted a child, Robert Horatio Orwell. Orwell, gradually making a name for himself as a public intellectual figure and muckracker, was, thanks to respiratory issues, declared unfit for military service in 1939, and spent the war writing for countless journals and magazines while at the same time producing his two most seminal works of fiction,
Animal Farm and
1984. The novels resonated strongly with the post-war public and made Orwell a household name. He died of tuberculosis in a London hospital at the age of 46.