The term "Room 101" was first devised by the political writer and novellist George Orwell,
(real name, Eric Arthur Blair), in the famous novel
Nineteen Eighty-four
. Published in 1949, this groundbreaking novel was written with the intent of merging political
writing with the style of the novellist, and coined new words of warning for us, many
of which have passed into the vernacular.
- Big Brother
The terrifyingly reassuring leader of the totalitarian state of Oceania, whose
obsession with thought control prompted the installation of all-seeing "telescreens"
in all homes and public places which could not be switched off, and transmitted
surveillance information back to The Party.
- Goldstein
The arch-traitor, from whose teachings and inspiration all forms of dissent,
terrorism and sabotage sprung.
- The Thought Police
A branch of the government whose aim was to make all forms of thought contrary to
the Party's doctrine of "IngSoc" illegal. In the eyes of the Thought Police, there
was no distinction between the thought and the act, so that contemplating or planning
a crime incurred the same penalty as carrying it out.
- Newspeak
The official language of the State of Oceania - a form of abbreviated jargon consisting
of euphemisms such as "JoyCamp" (concentration camp), in which the primary aim was
the destruction of heretical thought by the continuous reduction of the official
vocabulary, making it impossible to argue against the principles of Ingsoc.
- Doublethink
The practice of holding two contradictory beliefs in one's mind simultaneously,
believing them both to be true, and failing to see any contradiction. Exemplified
in Party slogans such as "War is Peace" and "Freedom is Slavery"
- Room101
A unique place in the Ministry of Love where a person's greatest fears are made to
come true, as a form of emotional manipulation.
Room 101 Limited has no connection with the British Broadcasting Corporation,
nor with the television programme entitled "Room 101"