A memory hole is a fictional device for destroying historical evidence in George Orwell's 1949 dystopian novel Nineteen Eighty-Four. In the novel, the Party's Ministry of Truth systematically erases inconvenient historical documents, in effect, re-writing history to match the ever-changing state propaganda.

Origins

In Nineteen Eighty-Four, the "memory hole" is a small chute leading to a large incinerator used for :censorship:

The fictional totalitarian regime of Oceania maintains complete dominance over its population through the control of history and memory, specifically by erasing the past and forging historical facts. This historical forgery enforces a collective reality onto the masses, ensuring that the Party and its ideology persists. This concept is expressed in the principle doctrine of Ingsoc: "Who controls the past, controls the future: who controls the present controls the past". In one instance, the weekly chocolate ration was decreased from 30 grams to 20. The next day the newspaper announced that the chocolate ration had not been reduced to 20 grams per week, but increased to 20 grams. Any previous mention of the ration having been 30 grams per week needed to be destroyed.

The memory hole is referenced while O'Brien tortures Smith; O'Brien produces evidence of a coverup by the Party, exciting Smith that such documentation exists. However, O'Brien then destroys the evidence in the memory hole and denies not only the existence of the evidence but also any memory of his actions. Smith realises that this is doublethink in action, as O'Brien has actively suppressed his memory of both a politically inconvenient fact and his action taken to destroy the evidence of it.

Modern usage

Following the publication of Nineteen Eighty-Four in 1949, the term "memory hole" entered into common use both as a noun, meaning a place where inconvenient fact is disposed, and a verb meaning "to cause to be forgotten". It was used in a 1952 Foreign Affairs article stating that opposing views under Stalinism must be "consigned to the Orwellian 'memory hole'". After the death of Joseph Stalin, a Reuters report in August 1953 stated "the Soviet Communists are dropping 'big brother' down the ‘memory hole". The term "memory-holed" has also become widely used to describe information that disappears from the Internet.

Don Pittis, a CBS News columnist used the term to express worries that the 2014 "right to be forgotten" decision of the European Court of Justice creates a precedent for governments to create legal mechanisms that would essentially function as "memory holes" in ephemeral electronic storage systems.

In July 2002, a website named The Memory Hole, which was dedicated to preserving official documents, was launched by American writer Russ Kick.

See also

  • De-commemoration
  • Motivated forgetting
  • Postcolonial amnesia
  • Selective omission
  • Truth-seeking

References

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