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Animal Farm

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Animal Farm ENG2D Exam Review Historical Context Karl Marx develops The Communist Manifesto and calls the working class to unite 1917, Russian Revolution ousts ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Animal Farm


1
Animal Farm
  • ENG2D
  • Exam Review

2
Historical Context
  • Karl Marx develops The Communist Manifesto and
    calls the working class to unite
  • 1917, Russian Revolution ousts monarch
  • Tsar Nicholas II and sets the scene for Soviet
    Communism
  • Vladimir Lenin becomes chief commissar
  • Leon Trotsky and Joseph Stalin become likely
    heirs to Lenins powerful position
  • 1924, Stalin organizes an alliance against
    Trotsky after Lenins death
  • Stalin becomes dictator of the Soviet Union
  • Trotsky is expelled and made a common national
    enemy
  • Stalin rules the Soviet Union with brutal
    intensity and purges (murders) approximately
    twenty million citizens

3
Plot Overview
  • Old Major holds a meeting for all the animals on
    Manor Farm and tells them about his dream in
    which all animals live together without human
    beings controlling and oppressing them
  • When Old Major dies shortly after the meeting,
    three pigs Snowball, Napoleon, and Squealer
    create a philosophy called Animalism based off
    of Old Majors principles
  • One night, the animals battle Mr. Jones, Manor
    Farms farmer, in a rebellion and run him off
    the property
  • They rename the farm Animal Farm and dedicate
    themselves to Animalism
  • The principles of Animalism, the Seven
    Commandments, are painted on the barn for all
    animals to see
  • At first the farm is prosperous and Snowball
    tries to teach the animals to read

4
Plot Overview
  • Mr. Jones returns to try and reclaim the farm but
    Snowball leads the animals to defeat him again,
    in what they call the Battle of the Cowshed,
    keeping Joness gun as a token of their victory
  • Soon Napoleon and Snowball begin a power
    struggle over their conflicting plans for the
    future of the farm
  • Snowball develops a plan for a windmill that
    will benefit the animals on the farm but
    Napoleon opposes it
  • As the animals are about to vote on the issue,
    Napoleon unleashes large, fierce dogs he trained
    and has Snowball chased off the farm
  • From that point on, Napoleon declares himself
    and the pigs in charge of the farm
  • Napoleon changes his mind about the windmill and
    orders to have it built and the animals,
    especially Boxer the horse, devote themselves to
    completing
  • The windmill is destroyed after a storm and
    Napoleon claims that they have been sabotaged by
    Snowball

5
Plot Overview
  • Napoleon uses his dogs to instil fear in the
    other animals and stages a purge where any animal
    allegedly allied with Snowball or opposed to
    Napoleons leadership is instantly executed
  • History is rewritten to make Snowball a villain
  • Napoleon and the pigs begin to act more like
    human beings by sleeping in beds, drinking
    alcohol, and trading with neighbouring farms
    despite the original principles of Animalism
    which forbade such actions
  • Squealer justifies all activities and convinces
    the animals that Napoleon is a great leader and
    making their lives better even though the
    animals (except the pigs and dogs) are cold,
    hungry, and overworked

6
Plot Overview
  • A neighbouring farmer, Mr. Fredrick of Pinchfield
    Farm, cheats Napoleon in the purchase of some
    timber and then attacks the farm and destroys the
    windmill
  • Boxer receives major injuries in battle and is
    weakened, resulting in a fall during the 2nd
    rebuilding of the windmill
  • Napoleon tells the animals he will send Boxer to
    a veterinarian but instead sells Boxer to a glue
    maker for money to purchase whisky
  • After years pass, the pigs become more and more
    like human beings by walking on their hind legs,
    carrying whips, and wearing clothing.
  • The original Seven Commandments are altered and
    finally reduced to the single principle, All
    animals are equal, but some animals are more
    equal than others.
  • Napoleon allies himself with another neighbouring
    farmer, Mr. Pilkington of Foxwood Farm and Animal
    Farm is reverted back to Manor Farm
  • The animals are no longer able to distinguish the
    pigs from the humans

7
Characters
  • Napoleon
  • Represents Joseph Stalin
  • Emerges as the leader of Animal Farm
  • Intimidates the other animals to gain power
  • Proves to be a violent, brutal, and treacherous
    dictator
  • Snowball
  • Represents Leon Trotsky
  • Challenges Napoleon for control of Animal Farm
  • Intelligent, passionate, eloquent, and less
    devious than Napoleon
  • Wins the loyalty of the animals rather than
    forcing it
  • Boxer (and Clover being the female counterpart)
  • Represents the working class
  • Has incredible strength, dedication, and loyalty
    to Animal Farm
  • Quick to help but slow-witted, has the motto I
    will work harder
  • Naively trusts the pigs to make decisions for
    him, has the motto Napoleon is always right

8
Characters
  • Squealer
  • Represents propaganda
  • Justifies the pigs actions and spreads false
    statistics
  • Uses language to twist the truth and maintain
    control
  • Old Major
  • Represents both Karl Marx and Vladimir Lenin
  • Inspires the animals to rebel with his utopian
    dream
  • Moses
  • Represents religion
  • Spreads stories about a paradise called
    Sugarcandy Mountain where animals go when they
    die
  • Mollie
  • Represents the middle class that fled Russia soon
    after the revolution
  • Vain and attention-craving, misses wearing
    ribbons and eating sugar so she leaves

9
Characters
  • Mr. Jones
  • Represents Tsar Nicholas II
  • Farmer that runs Manor Farm before the Rebellion
  • Indulges himself while his animals lack food
  • Mr. Frederick and Pinchfield Farm
  • Represents Adolf Hitler and Germany
  • Tough, shrewd, and untrustworthy
  • Mr. Pilkington and Foxwood Farm
  • Represents the capitalist governments of England
    and the U.S.
  • Easygoing and gentlemanly
  • Enemies with Mr. Frederick

10
Seven Commandments
  • Over the course of the novel, changes are made to
    the original Seven Commandments
  • The original commandments are in white and
    changes (including chapter in which the change
    was made) are indicated in red italics
  • Whatever goes upon two legs is an enemy
    (replaced with Four legs good Two legs bad in
    Chapter 3 but bad is changed to better in
    Chapter 10)
  • Whatever goes upon four legs, or has wings, is a
    friend (replaced with Four legs good Two legs
    bad in Chapter 3 but bad is changed to
    better in Chapter 10)
  • No animal shall wear clothes
  • No animal shall sleep in a bed with sheets
    (Chapter 6)
  • No animal shall drink alcohol to excess (Chapter
    8)
  • No animal shall kill any other animal without
    cause (Chapter 8)
  • All animals are equal, but some are more equal
    than others (Chapter 10)
  • In the end, only the altered 7th commandment
    remains

11
Themes
  • Corruption
  • Theme statement example Absolute power leads to
    absolute corruption and perversion of justice,
    liberation, and equality.
  • Napoleon reigned tyrannically over Animal Farm
    because he had unquestioned power and as a result
    he brought about incredible violence.
  • Societys Tendency Towards Social Class
  • Theme statement example It is human tendency to
    establish and maintain class structure even in
    societies that are allegedly equal.
  • Animal Farm originally set out for all animals to
    be equal but in the end some were more equal
    than others.
  • The Danger of Naïveté
  • Theme statement example If the naïve choose to
    take others at face value and allow others to
    make decisions for them it could potentially
    lead to great harm for the individual.
  • Boxer and the other farm animals believed
    whatever Napoleon and Squealer would tell them
    and assumed that whatever they did was right
    which brought them into great oppression.
  • Abuse of Language to Abuse Power
  • Theme statement example Propaganda twists words
    and manipulates language in order to attain
    control and power.
  • Squealer artfully uses language to justify the
    actions of the pigs and convince the other
    animals to follow Napoleon blindly

12
Symbols
  • The Rebellion
  • Symbolizes the Russian Revolution
  • Animal Farm
  • Also known as Manor Farm at the beginning and end
    of the novel
  • Symbolizes Russia and the Soviet Union under the
    Communist Party (or Animalism in the novel)
  • More generally, can also stand for any human
    society because it possesses the structure of a
    nation
  • Government (the pigs)
  • Police force or military (the dogs)
  • Working class (other animals)
  • Hoof Horn flag
  • Represents the Hammer and Sickle of the Soviet
    flag
  • Battle of the Cowshed
  • Represents Red October
  • Civil war where the Tsarists tried to reclaim the
    nation from the Communists
  • Windmill
  • Symbolizes Stalins Five-Year plan
  • Both the plan and the windmill came with a
    promise to make life easier and both utterly
    failed
  • Purges
  • Referring to the Stalins purges of 1936-1938
    where millions of Soviets where violently killed

13
Good Luck on your exam!
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