adjective
Orwellian
Reminiscent of totalitarian surveillance, propaganda, and language control.
Origin
From George Orwell's 1984 (1949), where the Party rewrites history, monitors thought, and reshapes language to make dissent impossible. The novel introduced 'Big Brother,' 'thoughtcrime,' 'doublethink,' and 'memory hole' — each still in active use.
Modern usage
Frequently invoked — by people on every side of politics — to describe surveillance tech, content moderation, or rhetorical manipulation. Often overused.
In the wild
The phrase 'enhanced interrogation' is genuinely Orwellian.— political criticism
Tags
surveillance
politics
language