Thursday, November 28, 2019
Animal Farm Essays (613 words) - British Films, Cold War Films
  Animal Farm    Animal Farm    Animal Farm, written by George Orwell,  is a masterpiece mocking communism. Animalism, which represents communism,  was a revolution that didn't work. Animalism was supposed to make life  better for the animals but instead their lives got worse. By the end of  the story, everything had changed. The government had become corrupt, there  was a dictator, and the animals had become slaves to the pigs. Life for  the animals couldn't get any worse.    At the beginning of the story, the animals  revolted because of the way they were treated by Mr. Jones, the farmer.    They felt that the farmers made all the profit, reaped all the rewards  but didn't do any of the work. So they formed a government called Animalism.    In Animalism, there are no owners, no rich, but no poor, workers got a  better life, and all animals are equal. They had even established laws  called the Seven Commandments, which were intended to give basic rights  to animals and protect them from oppression. The goals of the government  were also established. The goals said that everyone was equal, there would  be more food and sleep for all, there was to be respect for all animals,  and they would build a windmill to make life better for all. By the end  of the book, all this no longer existed. The animals were getting less  sleep, less food, and less respect. The windmill became a source of money  for the leaders, not for all the animals. The seven commandments were gradually  changed to suit the pigs and then there was only one Commandment left.    "'Are the Seven Commandments the same as they used to be, Benjamin?' There  was nothing now except for a single Commandment. It ran: All animals are  equal but some are more equal than others"(133). That single commandment  made the pigs more powerful. Animalism no longer existed.    At the beginning of the story, there were  two leaders, Snowball and Napoleon, that were sharing power. Snowball was  good with words, honest, good at arguing, was inventive, and believed in  technology. He stayed in touch with the animals, and wanted to make things  better for them. Napoleon, on the other hand, was bad with words, dishonest,  hated arguing, and was not inventive. He wanted to be above all the animals;  he didn't care about making things better. He only believed in serving  himself. In order for Napoleon to be above all the animals, he had to get    Snowball out of the way. Napoleon did that by getting his dogs to scare  him away so Snowball would never come back to the farm. Napoleon was now  in total control of the farm and the animals. Napoleon and the pigs started  acting like humans - they would drink, wear clothes, sleep in beds, fight,  and walk. They did everything that they had once said was wrong. Things  were worse for the rest of animals than when Mr. Jones was running the  farm.    Just after the revolution, the animals  worked on the farm because they wanted to. All the animals owned the farm,  so all worked for it. It was their farm. After Napoleon takes over and  creates a dictatorship, the animals are forced to work. Napoleon and the  pigs owned the farm and the others became slaves to them. The animals "volunteered"  or they got less food. The dogs used force; and Squealer, a pig, would  lie to them to make them work. The pigs weren't fair to the other animals  at all.    Orwell shoes that revolutions are not always  for the better. The outcome of it is not the same as it would be if there  is someone that wants more power and is never satisfied with what they  have already achieved. That person is always thinking about themselves  instead of the good of the others. It seems to be in "human" nature to  act the way that way.    
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