banner



What Point Of View Is Told In Animal Farm

<- Previous Page | First Page | Next Page ->
Free Study Guide-Animal Subcontract past George Orwell-Free Online Booknotes
Table of Contents | Bulletin Board | Printable Version | Barron's Booknotes

POINT OF VIEW

Orwell tells the story of Animal Farm through a tertiary person, impersonal and omniscient point of view. The narrator is never involved in the action of the story, but seems to appear somewhere outside or above everything that is going on. This point of view allows Orwell to see into the minds of the characters and empathise their motivations. As a upshot, Orwell lets his readers know what the animals do not, for the animals do not understand anything more than they run across or hear. The reader, on the other paw, is made to empathize the ruthless purposes and motives behind all the actions of Napoleon and Squealer. The reader is likewise fabricated to realize that Boxer, similar all the common animals, are simply used by Napoleon and discarded or killed when no longer needed; but the animals are never able to see this. This betoken of view too helps Orwell to point out the difference between what a animal thinks about himself versus what others think virtually him. The reader knows what Boxer feels about himself and too what the pigs think about him. The omniscient point of view as well helps Orwell to motion freely and make the reader see, hear, know, and focus on whatever and wherever he chooses.

ALLEGORY - SYMBOLISM

An allegory is a serial of metaphors or symbols continued throughout an entire story so every bit to represent or describe one series of facts by using another that is analogous to its principal features. 'Animal Farm' is intended to be an allegory of Russian history from 1917-1943, including the period of World War I, the Economical Policy Plan, and the kickoff Five Year Programme. All the characters of 'Brute Farm' parallel figures in Russian history during this period. Napoleon represents Stalin, and Snowball reflects Trotsky. Mollie represents all those Russians who fled the land after the Bolshevik Revolution in 1917. Boxer, the true-blue workhorse, represents the faithful proletariat, and the Russian Orthodox Church building has a parallel in Moses, the raven.

In a similar fashion, the Boxing of Cowshed represents the civil war that followed the Russian Revolution. Jones is helped by men from the neighboring farms of Foxwood and Pinchfield, merely as some western countries sent troops to assistance the Russian forces; the Battle of Windmill symbolizes the industrialization of Russia. Even in some of the small details, parallels can be seen. The hen's revolt against Napoleon when the latter orders to sell the eggs corresponds to the feudal lords' revolt against Stalin when he makes farming collective.

Although the book has much to say about basic human nature, Orwell's main purpose is to show how Communism fails to create a utopian order. 'Animal Subcontract', Orwell wrote, "was the first volume in which I tried, with total consciousness of what I was doing to fuse political purpose and artistic purpose into the whole." Some of his allegorical parallels are listed below.

Animal Farm = History of Russian federation

Old Major'southward philosophy = The philosophies of Marx and Lenin

Lust = Communism

Other Animals = Bolsheviks (common people )

Mr. Jones = Arbiter of Russia

7 Commandments = Communist Manifesto

Skull of Old Major = Lenin's body

Erstwhile Major'south death = Lenin'southward expiry followed by struggle for power

Windmill Construction = Russian construction of steel mills and electric plants

Napoleon's sale of timber to Frederick = Stalin entered into a non-aggression pact with Hitler'due south Germany

Frederick's declaration of state of war on = Hitler's proclamation of state of war on Russia Brute Subcontract

Windmill destroyed, animals died = Stalingrad destroyed

Sugarcandy = In 1944 Stalin wrote letters to Pope to behave services

Napoleon's entertaining of humans in the farmhouse = Different meetings between Stalin and Churchill in Russia

Table of Contents | Bulletin Board | Printable Version | Barron's Booknotes


<- Previous Page | First Page | Adjacent Page ->
Free Study Guide-Animal Farm by George Orwell-Free Plot Summary

Source: http://pinkmonkey.com/booknotes/monkeynotes/pmAnimalFarm22.asp

Posted by: cokerdiethat.blogspot.com

Related Posts

0 Response to "What Point Of View Is Told In Animal Farm"

Post a Comment

Iklan Atas Artikel

Iklan Tengah Artikel 1

Iklan Tengah Artikel 2

Iklan Bawah Artikel