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Political Allegory In The Book Animal Farm





"Ideas play a part in any revolution, conflicting ideas is main reason why Revolutions happens. " This is the platform that George Orwell  used in his book " Animal Farm". The political allegory in the story is mocking the Revolution  that  changed "Russia" into the "USSR".  This was the workings of  Karl Marx.  Marx was  known for being politically  inspired by one idea.  Marx wanted it to be that one class, the working class, and against another class, the rich or higher class.  The Revolution was started by men who believed with Karl Marx's theory that the history of the world was the history of a struggle between classes between oppressors and oppressed.


This happened in the book "Animal Farm by George Orwell" Orwell uses this example to base his book on.  He makes the characters personify the major players in the Russian Revolution.  Orwell uses this to form a well written piece of literature.  In "Animal Farm" The Democratic society led by Mr. Jones the original leader  of Manor Farm was overthrown by a policy called Animalism.  Animalism was a theory concocted by the Old Major a Pig.  In "Animal Farm"  the pigs were personified as the smartest and the best among animals.  The Pigs take control of the farm.  The two major idealists Snowball and Napoleon have conflicting ideas.  These ideas break snowball  away from the rest of the group and make him leave Animal Farm.  This lets Napoleon have total control.  They set up a set of rules  called the seven commandments.  In the beginning everyone followed these rules such as no animal may kill another animal, no animal is better than another animal.  This makes the leader Napoleon want to break the rules so he makes him and his fellow pigs more special, eating all the good food, wearing clothes, living in the farmhouse, and not working.  As for the other animals big or small get the same rations of food, are not allowed to wear clothes, had to live in the barn, and were overworked.

       Marx, like other socialist thinkers of the 19th century, denounced the cruel injustices of     industrial      capitalist society as he saw it. He had a vision of ending "the exploitation of man by   man" and      establishing a classless society, in which all people would be equal. The only means     to this end, he      thought, was a revolution of the exploited (the proletariat) against the     exploiters (the bourgeoisie),     so that workers would own the means of production, such as the      factories and machinery. This      revolution would set up a "dictatorship of the proletariat" to do       away with the old bourgeois order      (the capitalist system) and eventually replace it with a       classless society. Lenin took this idea and      further focused on the role of the Communist Party       as the leader of the working class. 
     When Lenin reached Russia in 1917 a first revolution against the crumbling regime of the      Czar had already taken place. The new government was democratic, but "bourgeois." Lenin       victoriously
     headed the radical socialist (Bolshevik) revolution in October of that year. This was   immediately
       followed by four years of bloody civil war: the Revolution's Red Army, organized and led by Leon
       Trotsky, had to defeat the "Whites" (Russians loyal to the Czar or just hostile to the Communists)
       and foreign troops, too.

     At Lenin's death in 1924, there was a struggle between Joseph Stalin and Trotsky for   leadership of
       the Communist Party and thus of the nation. In 1925, Stalin clearly gained the upper hand; in    1927,
       he was able to expel Trotsky from the Party. Later Trotsky was exiled, then deported, and finally
assassinated in Mexico, probably by a Stalinist agent, in 1940. All this time, Stalin never stopped
       denouncing Trotsky as a traitor.

             Power in the Soviet Union became increasingly concentrated in Stalin's hands. In the     1930s,
       massive arrests and a series of public trials not only eliminated all possible opposition, but loyal
       Bolsheviks and hundreds of thousands of other absolutely innocent Russians.

             Still, people all over the world who felt the pull of Marx's ideal- an end to exploitation   and oppression, as they saw it- thought of the Soviet Union as the country of the Revolution. It   was
       hard for many people on the Left (who think of themselves as on the side of the exploited, and
       want major changes in society to attain social justice) to give up this loyalty. That's one reason       why
       Orwell wrote Animal Farm.



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