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| Hearsay: |
The fact that Eliot rejected Orwell’s Animal Farm just goes to show you that one genius’s lack-of-genius is another genius’s genius. Or something.
In a letter from 1944 explaining why he would not be publishing the work, Eliot told Orwell that he was not persuaded by the “Trotskyite” politics which underpin the narrative. To publish such an anti-Russian novel would jar in the contemporary political climate, explained the poet.
“We have no conviction … that this is the right point of view from which to criticise the political situation at the present time. It is certainly the duty of any publishing firm which pretends to other interests and motives other than mere commercial prosperity to publish books which go against the current of the moment,” wrote Eliot, before going on to say that he was not convinced that “this is the thing that needs saying at the moment.” The letter, which has been in the private collection of Eliot’s widow, Valerie, since he died, is explored in a forthcoming edition of the BBC documentary series, Arena.
In the letter, Eliot argued that Orwell’s “view, which I take to be Trotskyite, is not convincing.”
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March 30th, 2009 at 9:49 am
It’s so interesting that back then the general attitude toward the Soviet Union was so different than it became after the second World War. I’ve read other examples of journalism being rejected because it was “anti-Russian” (eg an article written by Will Durant criticizing the Soviet Union in the 1930’s).