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35 pages 1 hour read

George Orwell

Keep the Aspidistra Flying

Fiction | Novel | Adult | Published in 1936

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Symbols & Motifs

Aspidistra

Aspidistras are a common houseplant that became widespread in Victorian England because they grow well indoors with little sunlight. Because of their popularity among English homeowners, they became a symbol of the English middle class. This is explicitly true for Gordon, who reads about a bankrupt carpenter who sells everything except an aspidistra: “The aspidistra became a sort of symbol for Gordon after that. The aspidistra, flower of England!” (44). As an ornamental object suited to those with relatively little property (i.e. no outdoor garden), the plant encapsulates the pointless scramble to accumulate cheap goods that capitalist consumer culture encourages.

However much Gordon rebels against money and the middle class, he is always overshadowed by a sickly aspidistra. His room at Mrs. Wisbeach’s tenant house has a sickly aspidistra that Gordon deliberately tries to kill to no success. Likewise, the dining room of Mrs. Wisbeach, who keeps up a pretense of middle-class respectability, is covered with aspidistras. Gordon rails against the plants at various points throughout the novel. For example, enraged by his supposed snubbing by the Dorings, he says, “I’ll beat you yet, you b—” to the aspidistra before making the very un-middle-class move of writing a letter telling off the Dorings.

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