Great writers engage with the changing times and by using their
imaginations transform their ideas and environments into fiction. More
than any other writer of the 20th century, George Orwell responded to a
period of historical change by imagining his dystopian future of
Nineteen Eighty-Four, perhaps the most influential political novel
ever written.
At the same time Nineteen Eighty-Four was very much a product of
postwar England with its rations and shortages. Orwell, in fact,
remained a socialist until his death in January 1950, but the far more
intriguing question is what Nineteen Eighty-Four would be like if it
were written today, in an age of Islamist terror, fake news and
post-truth politics.