Allusions In Animal Farm

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LITERARY ANALYSIS OF ANIMAL FARM

“It doesn't take a majority to make a rebellion; It takes only a few determined leaders and a sound cause”- H.L. Mencken. In George Orwell's allegorical novel Animal Farm, the animals wanted freedom from their unfair leader Farmer Jones. In order to achieve this they must rebel against Farmer Jones and make him leave the farm by chasing him off the farm. Once he leaves the farm, the two leading pigs Snowball and Napoleon create a government system to organize the animals. Snowball and Napoleon come to a misunderstanding and eventually forces Snowball to be banished off the farm.This is the start of when the pigs start acting like humans, even though the humans were their worst enemies. In Animal Farm, …show more content…

This quote represents the unfair dictatorship that humans hold over animals and represents the exact same thing that the animals are trying to fight against.This is a good representation of irony in this …show more content…

Allusions are used to bring something to the reader's attention without blatantly saying it. One example of allusion is the Russian Revolution. The way that the idea of ‘animalism’ starts out was great there were set rules and regulations just as a government should have, similar to how communism began in the Revolution. In both the novel and in the Russian Revolution a corrupt leader takes dictatorship, and it slowly becomes unequal between the animals as the benefits shift to the pigs and not the working animals. Because of this, the farm becomes just as bad, if not worse, than the very thing they worked so hard to fight against, the corruption in the humans. Another example of allusion in Animal Farm is the windmill. Originally, it was Snowball’s idea; but short after he was banished. Napoleon put the plan in movement, and used cruel means to do so, which represents Stalin and the industrial revolution. The effect of these allusions contributes to the satirical tone of the

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