A review by raulbime
Prisons We Choose to Live Inside by Doris Lessing

4.0

Doris Lessing was born in Persia but raised in Southern Rhodesia, present day Zimbabwe. Her living and witnessing the brutal racism by the white colonialists in Zimbabwe against the black population awakened her activism against colonialism and oppressive structures which in turn influenced her writing. In this series of essays Doris Lessing examines how and why societies revert back to cruelties and authoritarianism after years of progress.

There's a particular description of Margaret Thatcher's campaign that was so shocking to me.

"When Mrs. Thatcher was elected for her second term of office, she employed
Saatchi & Saatchi, a big advertising firm, to handle her campaign. These people
used every trick in the book, from turns of phrase calculated to arouse easy
emotions, to the colours of her dresses and the curtains she stood in front of, to
calculated entrances and exits and the use of the media."


Seems eerily familiar? The use of a firm to manipulate the public for political purposes? It was so odd reading these essays and recognising what Lessing had observed and written about in the 80s replicate itself in such a similar manner. Doris Lessing explores "group pressure" and how dangerous it is for a society, the importance of social sciences and history and literature in learning about ourselves and how history repeats itself while guarding ourselves against institutions, governments and groups that may use all this information for ill motives.

A small book but a mind opening read.