Animal Farm
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- Book lovin bill
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Re: Animal Farm
Old Major represents Karl Marx
Snowball represents Leon Trotsky
Napoleon represents Josef Stalin
Squealer represents propaganda
Boxer represents all the Russian laborers and workers.
Mr Jones represents Nicolas czar the 2nd
Benjiman represents the Russian intellectual whom did nothing
Moses represents religion
Dogs represent the KGB
Manor farm = Russia
Animalism = communism
The farm house = the Kremlin
The windmill = trotskys plans
Mr pilkington = leader of the United Kingdom
Fox wood farm = England
Mr Fredrick = Adolf hitler
Pinchfild farm = Germany
Mollie = Russian aristocratics
The hens = the kulaks
England = the world
The beasts of England = the soviet national anthem
The sheep = the followers
Wow that took a while to type
Any way as I was saying it was in my opinion the best book ever written by the best author ever to write its snappy quotes and saddening truth where I joy to read.
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I have to agree with David, with some books the politics can be subtle, but it is blatant in animal farm. I think the author used animals instead of people just because the topic was so overt and depressing that the animal allegory made it more digestible to read. The scene when the horse gets sent to the glue factory would be an even tougher read if it was a person getting sent to the gulags.David Dawson wrote: ↑10 May 2014, 17:55Maybe this says something about me, but if it was just a "neat talking animals book" I wouldn't be interested. It's only good because it says something about history, politics, society, humanity...I don't want to be pseudy and pretentious, but isn't that, well, kind of the point of literature?Lysithian wrote:Just like me! I read the book thinking it was just a neat talking animals book and then had to reread in HS and noooooo it's ruined! You mean it was political?! What?! I don't think I ever read it again after that class.Misa-Jane wrote:I first picked this book up when I was quite young and hadn't actually heard of it before (whether through youth or ignorance!) so I came to the story with no idea that it was political. Of course, I recognized some of the names, like Napoleon, but I really just read and enjoyed the book as an interesting story about anthropomorphic farm animals. I think the fact that you can read it without knowing much about politics, and without feeling like you are being preached to, is what has kept this book so popular. It is likely to continue to be read much longer than some of the more blatant satirical works that easily become dated. In this respect, I think Animal Farm is a lot like Gulliver's Travels: you don't have to focus on the satire and politics, but you can get a whole different perspective if you do.
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