A New Direction: Starting Small

 

George Orwell demonstrated that the strongest writing almost always comes from a place of personal experience and direct observation. Through the last year, we’ve all been locked down. Many of us feeling like we know our towns, villages, streets and local parks better than ever before. With this year’s theme, it’s our goal to support you to think hard about your local environment, encourage you to trust your observations and use the authority you have to report and write creatively on the changes you’d like to see to create a better society, starting with what’s on your doorstep.

Scroll down for our resources and interactive ways to engage with the theme – and some suggested reading to spark ideas. In the meantime, we better start with George Orwell himself.

George Orwell and thinking small

Orwell provides an example of a writer who addressed, in the clearest terms, the major political issues of his day, from economic injustice at home to imperialism and totalitarianism abroad, while also taking deep pleasure in the things which make places and people unique. As a columnist for the magazine Tribune he would write about war in Europe one week, and English cookery the next. His belief in the importance of seeing for oneself was not limited to taking an active part in history, as he did in the Spanish Civil War and the Road to Wigan Pier: it was an everyday injunction. It was only by paying close attention to what is ‘in front of one’s nose’ that the ordinary citizen could equip themselves to resist the barrage of political propaganda they are subject to and see more clearly what steps were necessary to make the world a better place.

“To see what is in front of one’s nose needs a constant struggle.”

In Front of One’s Nose, George Orwell

“I write… because there is some lie that I want to expose, some fact to which I want to draw attention, and my initial concern is to get a hearing.”

Why I Write, George Orwell

“Perhaps a man really dies when his brain stops, when he loses the power to take in a new idea.”

Coming Up for Air, George Orwell

Here are some examples of essays from The Orwell Foundation library, where Orwell starts small:

The Need for a New Direction – Prompts

The world feels overwhelming at the moment. A pandemic, the looming threat of the climate crisis, increasing inequality, and the rise of big data seem insurmountable due to the sheer magnitude of the problems we face. At the same time, the urgency of these threats is galvanising young people like you into action but where do you start when these issues seem incomprehensibly large?

To get you started, you might want to consider:

  • What does your support network look like? (is it a person, is it online, where is it?)
  • What do you most like about where you live? What makes it unique?
  • Think about your daily routine. Which bits do you look forward to, which bits could be better and who/what could help you improve your day-to-day?
  • Go for a walk and examine the built environment and nature around you. What do you see? What is worth protecting? What steps can be taken to ensure that future generations can value the environment?
  • Research the street names in your local area, who or what is represented? What’s interesting/disappointing/exciting about that?
  • Many young people feel pessimistic about the possibility of changing the future. What do you think is the cause of this pessimism, and what steps can be taken by young people to regain their agency?
  • The pandemic has increased our reliance on digital spaces and communities. Digital spaces can bring us together, provide entertainment, joy and help us learn, but constant connectedness also raises concerns about privacy, status anxiety and mental health. How do you relate to the online world? What problems can you identify with digital spaces? What could be done to address them?

Resources and reading

We’ve teamed up with writers, journalists and experts to create a series of resources around specific topics relating to this year’s theme: each resource includes an introduction to the topic and more prompts to get writing and researching, from creative writing to football.

Stories From the Ground Up: Local Journalism

  • Learn about the importance of local journalism, and get some tips for trying your own, from the team at The Bristol Cable.

Politics, Football and Place

  • Football teams are rooted in places, but that link is being shaken by globalisation. Wyn Grant, author of Political Football, explores the implications.

Ways into Creative Writing

  • in a series of videos and prompts, poet Miriam Nash will help you play get writing about the places you know.

In addition, we are creating a reading list below for you to explore how to approach this question. We will update this list throughout the course of the prize, but your reading doesn’t have to be limited to it: be inquisitive and critically engage with news items and articles you read.

Climate Change and Local Action

Read

Listen

Orwell Youth Prize Inspiration

Education

Read

Listen

Orwell Youth Prize Writing

Public Spaces

Read

Listen

Watch

Place and Identity

Read

Listen

Watch

Orwell Youth Prize Inspiration

Work

Read

Listen

Orwell Youth Prize Inspiration

Housing

Read

Listen

Orwell Youth Prize Inspiration

Daily Life & The Self

Read

Listen

Orwell Youth Prize Inspiration

Local Democracy

Read

Writing Advice (new writing, short stories, writers discuss their work)

Read

  • New Writing North
  • Our writing resources:
  • Also remember that all youth prize winners and runners up from 2019 and 2020 gave their own writing advice, visible in interviews at the bottom of their pages

Listen

Watch

If you have any further questions, suggestions, or thoughts, please get in touch with Alex Talbott, alextalbott@orwellyouthprize.co.uk