The Importance of Taking Liberties

The last episode of Simon Schama‘s BBC TV series A History of Britain, called “The Two Winstons”, follows the story of the Second World War and the immediate aftermath through the eyes of two very different Englishmen, George Orwell and Winston Churchill. Near the end of the programme Schama talks about the year 1948, when a very sick Orwell wrote his last major novel, Nineteen Eighty-Four. I’ve reconstructed this section from the subtitles on my DVD of the series.

It starts with a direct quote from 1984

In our world there will be no love but the love of Big Brother, no laughter but that of triumph. No art, no science, no literature, no enjoyment, but always and only, Winston, there will be the thrill of power. If you want a picture of the future, imagine a boot stamping on a human face forever.

It continues with the voice of Simon Schama as narrator

To clear his head of the static hum of postwar London, Orwell went as far away as he could without actually leaving Britain, to the very edge of the kingdom – the Hebridean island of Jura. No electricity, no telephone, post twice a week, maybe.

And it was here, in the remotest cottage he could find, typing in bed with the machine on his knees, knowing he hadn’t long to live, that Orwell concentrated on what mattered most to him, and to Britain – the fate of freedom in the age of superpowers. As Churchill issued his grim warnings, Orwell created a common or garden plain man’s Winston – Winston Smith. The year was 1948.

When we think of 1984, most of us think of the tyranny of drabness and mass obedience ruled by Big Brother, a world of doublespeak where war is peace and lies are truth. But Orwell’s last masterpiece is most powerful and most lyrical when it describes Winston’s resistance to dictatorship, a guerrilla action fought, not with guns and barricades, but by literally taking liberties, a walk in the country, an act of love, the singing of an old nursery rhyme.

Winston Smith did all these forbidden things, prompted by a dim memory of a time when they were absolutely normal. The last refuge of freedom against Big Brother is memory. The greatest horror of 1984 is the dictator’s attempt to wipe out history.

I thought of the last sentence when I read about Donald Trump’s plan to rewrite American history for the 250th anniversary of the Declaration of Independence, but that’s just one example of the rise of authoritarian regimes around the world. In the context of the TV programme, Schama was making a case for the importance of history as a discipline, but there is something else important to say: we should not forget the past but, perhaps even more importantly, neither should we forget about the future we wanted to see.

#AHIstoryOfBritain #GeorgeOrwell #NineteenEightyFour #SimonSchama #TheTwoWinstons

Simon Schama - Wikipedia

Jonathan Cook: Shilling for Israel’s Genocide
https://consortiumnews.com/2025/05/07/jonathan-cook-shilling-for-israels-genocide/
These shills are as morally culpable as the court historians who in 1930s Germany denounced those who opposed the extermination of Jews, Romanies, Communists, the disabled and gays as anti-Aryan racists. By Jonathan Cook Jonathan-Cook.net Anyone who at this point…
#Politics #Analysis #Britain #Colonialism #Commentary #Gaza #Genocide #History #HumanRights #Intelligence #InternationalCourtOfJustice(icj) #InternationalcriminalCourt(icc) #Israel #Legal #Media #MiddleEast #Palestine #Propaganda #U.s. #BenjaminNetanyahu #HowardJacobson #IsraelKatz #JonathanCook #SimonSchama #SimonSebagMontefiore
Jonathan Cook: Shilling for Israel’s Genocide

These shills are as morally culpable as the court historians who in 1930s Germany denounced those who opposed the extermination of Jews, Romanies, Communists, the disabled and gays as anti-Aryan racists. By Jonathan Cook Jonathan-Cook.net Anyone who at this point is still prioritising

Consortium News
Epidemiologist Adrien Proust (1834-1903) in Simon Schama’s “Foreign Bodies” (2023)

As many readers of Simon Schama's "Foreign Bodies: The Terror of Contagion, the Ingenuity of Science" (2023) probably were, I was surprised ...

Watching an episode of Simon Schama’s The Face of Britain. We had recorded this series on the set-top box back in the days when it was broadcast here. Now with most of our streaming service subscriptions paused, there is finally reason to browse our recordings. (Not to mention the DVD and Blu-ray collection…) This is a bit newer than his Power of Art series, it is even in HD. #SimonSchama

https://www.imdb.com/title/tt5202200/

The Face of Britain with Simon Schama (TV Series 2015– ) ⭐ 7.1 | Documentary

1h

IMDb

@thejenniwren

Unfortunately, it still seems to be behind a paywall.

Like the Financial Times op-ed by #SimonSchama that I would love to read...

"In the end, all history is natural history."

"Historian Simon Schama's new book traces the roots of today's distrust of #vaccines"

#VaccinesSaveLives #SimonSchama

[NPR title spells his name wrong as Simon Schema]

https://www.npr.org/2023/09/16/1199963958/historian-simon-schemas-new-book-traces-the-roots-of-todays-distrust-of-vaccines

This programme is really powerful. But it makes you wonder where - and when - the modern fightback will come from in our deteriorating times.

https://www.bbc.co.uk/programmes/p0d5wbzz

#simonschama #art #culture #protest

BBC Two - Simon Schama's History of Now, Series 1

Simon Schama looks back over his lifetime at the power of culture in shaping the present.

BBC
'Art summons us to action' is one of #SimonSchama 's conclusions in his three part series #HistoryOfNow. It's a powerful mix of politics, philosophy, storytelling, science, and yes, art and history. Each episode made me cry for different reasons and I urge you to watch it if you can access it. #SilentSpring

https://www.bbc.co.uk/programmes/p0d5wfy6

Post #World#War 2 there were deep #divisions in #America. Should it be a #social #democracy, in which a benevolent #state would look after its most vulnerable citizens or put its faith in #individual #enterprise+the #free #market to provide?

#SimonSchama examines how #filmmaker #CharlieChaplin+#author #AynRand created radically different #visions of how this new #postwar world should work, +how Rachel Carson drew attention to damage being done to the natural world.

BBC Two - Simon Schama's History of Now, Series 1, The Price of Plenty

Simon Schama examines how different Americans created visions of the postwar world.

BBC

'I don't want to hear that art and culture are a luxury, they are are a necessity, especially now'

#SimonSchama on the power of the creative imagination to speak deep, essential truths. #TheHistoryOfNow Vital, important #televsion #BBC