Animal Farm Rhetorical Analysis

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Author George Orwell’s seminal novel is clearly an allegory as it tells of a symbolic society of farm animals some say in heavy-handed and hammer-like fashion which repeats events just before the Russian Revolution of 1917 and on into the Stalin Era of the Soviet Union.Orwell’s original inspiration placed the able, ardent stable of activist animals eternally on the farm: He once saw a young boy on a cart, whipping his hardworking horse. That was when, Orwell stated, he saw how “men exploit animals in much the same way the rich exploit the proletariat”. This, in a nutshell, stands as the purpose of Animal Farm, in all its gory glory and less-than-beneficent beauty.

2. Assuredly, the cohesive coupling of “logos” and “pathos” provide the most …show more content…

First and foremost, such a dry, arguably dull non-fictional rendering would not be nearly as interesting; furthermore, far and away, Orwell’s intent was not to hold his readers’ interest, but to hold their feet to the fire. Via his mighty pen, the author clearly intended to issue a clarion call to stand roundly against communism, in its most pure form. That, in and of itself, is the be-all and end-all of Animal Farm’s rumblings and grumblings. Critics who might imprudently labor to denigrate or diminish the message to mere squeals from pigs or grunts from horses only succeed in downgrading their own credibility, not Orwell’s. His eloquence, abidingly, still rings through, and his message is immutable. Through it all, Orwell sought to prosaically paint communism as a human tragedy, not a historical …show more content…

Orwell warned of the dangers of becoming “one” (in communal collectivism), while Niemoller issued a converse clarion call for the general citizenry to instead stand as one, in the midst and maelstrom of pervasive, seeping evil which entered his life and community like so much dirty water from a broken sewage line. Orwell saw evil in false unity, and Niemoller lovingly saw much good in unity which stands true in the face of all

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