George Orwell- Animal Farm
Orwell's Animal Farm
The
novel opens by introducing us to the setting, Mr. Jones' farm, and the main
characters, the animals. And, yes, the animals can talk. Old Major, an old,
well-respected boar-pig calls the animals over to him to tell them about a
dream that he had. He then tells the animals that they should have an uprising
against Mr. Jones and the other humans. Old Major also tells the animals that
they should be loyal and not drink alcohol, use money, or kill each other.
Not long
after this, Old Major dies. Because they are smarter than the other animals,
the pigs start to run the farm. The farmer, Mr. Jones, is again drunk, so the
animals decide it is a good time to overthrow him. They successfully remove Mr.
Jones, and the animals start to run the farm. This time, it is the pigs that
create the rules, including no sleeping in beds, no wearing clothes, no
alcohol, no killing other animals, all animals are equal, and whoever has four
legs or wings is a friend.
The
animals start to run the farm, controlled by the pigs. Meanwhile, the pigs are
starting to use the fresh milk and eat the apples because they should be
healthy to be leaders. We also start to see other animals working harder or
becoming lazier. Also, the original rules start to be broken, so the animals
condense their rules to one: Two legs are bad.
The
other farms and farmers start to worry that their animals will also revolt. The
animals decide to meet with the farmers to reassure them, but it leads to
battle and some of the animals die. Following the battle, Animal Farm starts to
fall apart. Some of the animals are working with other farms, while some of the
animals are fighting to become the leader of the farm. Two main characters,
Snowball and Napoleon, start to campaign. Snowball's speeches are strong, but
Napoleon runs a better campaign. He often pulls dirty tricks to gain the
support of the animals, and he is elected the leader. Once elected, he ends all
meetings.
Once
Napoleon is in charge, he moves into the farmhouse, makes the other animals
work hard, and starts to trade with other farms. A windmill on the farm
collapses, and the animals begin to starve. The animals begin to blame
Snowball, although he was never elected. Napoleon starts to kill other animals
that hold meetings and to steal food from others. He begins to rewrite the
original farm rules and even insists that he is now called, 'Our Leader,
Comrade Napoleon.' The pigs even start to dress in human clothes and drink
alcohol. As the other animals continue to starve, become weaker, and even die,
the pigs are living in the house and growing stronger.
In the
last chapter, many years have passed. The pigs continue to run the farm, but
now walk on two legs and wear clothing, making it nearly impossible to tell
them apart from humans. In fact, when the animals see them in the house,
playing cards with the humans, they are unable to tell the pigs and the humans
apart. The animals are happy because they think they had overthrown a horrible
master, but they do not recognize that the current leaders are even worse. The
pigs believe all animals are equal, but some animals are more equal than
others.
Resource
Prepared by:Deniz Kılınç
Resource
Prepared by:Deniz Kılınç
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