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Animal Farm by George Orwell
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Animal Farm by George Orwell

Dec 30, 2015

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Animal Farm by George Orwell. George Orwell = Pen Name…born Eric Blair, 1903-1950. Idealist…gave up family wealth to be a journalist. Supported revolution in Spain…shot in neck. Disillusioned by corruption and results of rebellions in Spain & Russia. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation
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Page 1: Animal Farm by George Orwell

Animal Farmby George Orwell

Page 2: Animal Farm by George Orwell

George Orwell = Pen Name…born Eric Blair, 1903-1950

• Idealist…gave up family wealth to be a journalist.

• Supported revolution in Spain…shot in neck.

• Disillusioned by corruption and results of rebellions in Spain & Russia.

• Bitter towards communist policy & totalitarianism.

• Animal Farm, 1945…very popular…first edition sold out in one month.

Page 3: Animal Farm by George Orwell

Novel

A long fictional story, somewhere between 100-500 pages, using all the elements of storytelling: plot, setting, character, theme, point of view, foreshadowing, irony, etc.

Page 4: Animal Farm by George Orwell

Novella

A “little novel”…about 50 pages.

Page 5: Animal Farm by George Orwell

Totalitarianism

A kind of dictatorship where one political party has total control and all opposition is ruthlessly suppressed.

Page 6: Animal Farm by George Orwell

Fable

A humorous story in which animals speak and act like humans in order to expose some human weakness.

Page 7: Animal Farm by George Orwell

Allegory: A story that can be read on 2 levels.

1.

Animal Farm can be read as a funny fable about animals who rebel against their owner and take over a farm in England, only to allow corruption to ruin it.

2.Animal Farm can be

read as an allegory of the Russian Revolution of 1917 with animals representing characters from Russian history.

Page 8: Animal Farm by George Orwell

Satire

A form of literature that uses ridicule to make fun of people or events in order to bring about change.

Page 9: Animal Farm by George Orwell

Irony

• Situational: We realize there is a difference

between what we expect to

happen and what really happens.

• Dramatic: We know something the characters do not know…what is stated on the page is different from what is meant.

Page 10: Animal Farm by George Orwell

Themes

• Freedom and individual dignity must be guarded very carefully.

• Language is a powerful tool; used improperly, it can enslave and confuse us.

• Weakness can be dominated by strength, fear, and trickery.

• Hope and vision must be kept alive, or they will be lost.

Page 11: Animal Farm by George Orwell

Animal Farm

Characters = Russian Revolution

Page 12: Animal Farm by George Orwell

Farmer Jones = Czar Nicholas II

• Czar Nicholas II was a selfish, cruel leader, and was overthrown by the people…Communism.

• Farmer Jones was a cruel, drunken farmer, and was overthrown by the animals…Animalism.

Page 13: Animal Farm by George Orwell

Old Major = Karl Marx

• Invented animalism/communism• Incited rebellion• Died before the revolution• All animals are equal

Page 14: Animal Farm by George Orwell

Boxer (the horse) = loyal, hard working supporters of revolution

• Boxer unwittingly supported the corrupt government of the pigs through hard work and his two maxims:

1. “I must work harder.”2. “Napoleon is always right.”

Page 15: Animal Farm by George Orwell

Benjamin (the donkey) = the stubborn people who did not support the

revolution and felt nothing would ever be better or worse.

• Benjamin was loyal to boxer.• “Donkeys live a long time.”• Smart…knows what is going

on, but won’t talk about it.

Page 16: Animal Farm by George Orwell

Moses = The Church (religion)

• Pigs exile Moses when they want animals to work hard and rebell.

• Pigs allow him back when they want animals happy.

• Promises of Sugar-Candy Mountain = Heaven

Page 17: Animal Farm by George Orwell

Pigs

• Original leaders of rebellion/revolution.

• Let greed and corruption ruin vision.

• Dominated other animals with fear and trickery.

• Very smart.

Page 18: Animal Farm by George Orwell

Napoleon = Joseph Stalin

• An original leader of rebellion.

• Became a dictator.• Ruled with absolute

power and cruelty.• Greedy and selfish.• Killed or exiled any

opposition.

Page 19: Animal Farm by George Orwell

Snowball = Leon Trotsky

• An original leader of rebellion.

• Stuck to the beliefs of Marx.

• Constantly disagreed with Napoleon.

• Wanted good life for all animals/Russians.

Page 20: Animal Farm by George Orwell

Squealer = Propaganda Network

• Squealer is propaganda.• He adds words to the

commandments.• He convinces the animals

that their memories fail.• He uses fear of Jones.• He uses fake statistics.

Page 21: Animal Farm by George Orwell

Sheep = blind followers of rebellion

• Sheep represent those with blind loyalty to the rebellion and communism.

• They shout down those who try to speak or ask questions.

• “Four legs good; two legs bad.”

Page 22: Animal Farm by George Orwell

Dogs = KGB (secret police)

• Work for the pigs• Loyal to Napoleon• Intimidate the animals

by growling & barking• Executioners