How the ideas of Old Major turn into a bitter totalitarianism government

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Animal Farm is a book that was written by a once controversial author, named George Orwell, the author “was born June 25, 1903 in Motihari, Bengal, India, near the Nepalese border” [1]. His book, Animal Farm, was “a pivotal place in a new era of Cold War literature”[3]. However the main issue that the author incurred was that it was in the year of 1944, and World War Two was in full commission, therefore his novel was considered “Politically incorrect in 1944 when the USSR was still an ally” [3]. Furthermore this is the very reason that led to a struggle for the book to find a publisher, “Yet in July 1944, the small publishing house of Seeker and Warburg finally agreed to take Orwell’s manuscript, in part because the firm had a pre-existing relationship with him”[5]. However although it was a risk “When Seeker and Warburg released Animal Farm on August 17, 1945, the book sold at a brisk pace. “[5] Orwell book did not necessarily only get bad attention, but it also attracted the attention of the CIA, “Despite the CIA’s attempt to cloak its involvement in making Animal Farm, we should be pleased that the agency helped to create a cinema graphic version of the book” At the beginning of the story it starts in early march on a farm that is known as Manor Farm, it begins with a calling to the barn for a meeting from Old Major, who “originally was named Willingdon Beauty- a venerable 12-year-old Middle White boar”.[4] Old Major is the most respected animal on the farm, furthermore the reason that he calls on all the animals to come to the barn is because of he has had a dream that he would like to tell them about, and this dream is about overthrowing there oppressive leader, Mr.jones, the owner of Manor Farm. Another key thin...

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...lusion what first seemed like a valuable idea that was presented to the animals on Manor Farm, quickly and violently became a totalitarianism government, furthermore “Orwell demonstrates the spiky rhythms of revolution. His farmyard regression stresses how the day-to-day fight for subsistence subverts the immediacy and thrill of rebellion”(4). Finally it comes to a resolution that a revolution can go wrong if done incorrectly and in this case it went all wrong because of the creation of an elite class and the rising of a dictator who did not care for his comrades and mainly only for his elite class comrades. Moreover Napoleon would do anything that is deemed possible to ensure that his way of life and his power is in place, even if that meant disowning his friend snowball, and killing any animal on manor farm that he did not like or threaten his ruthless leadership.

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