An Analysis Of George Orwell's Animal Farm

526 Words2 Pages

George Orwell’s Animal Farm is an allegory rewriting the history of the Russian Revolution in 1917. This descriptive tale explains the links between different animal characters and what continues after the dethrone of Russian Tsar Nicholas II. Animals then throughout the book comprehend how there are consequences when ones power is misconducted.

Orwell has introduced Napoleon as a strong leader, due to tactical planning and schemes. “If comrade Napoleon says it, it must be right…Napoleon is always right,” (Page 37). The decisive acts that Napoleons character has established, allows the reader to assume the effects others have on each other. His forceful trait has persuaded all characters to abide by his rules and to take up his compelling way of life. “The pigs did not actually work, but directed and supervised the others…Gee up, comrade!” (Page 17). Joseph Stalin resembled Napoleon in the Russian Revolution. He had taken over Soviet Union as Napoleon did on Animal Farm. Both characters sneakily pushed to become a dictatorship by overriding fellow companions and foregrounding their...

Open Document