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Essay / Research Paper Abstract
A 6 page paper which examines how the novel achieves the author’s primary goal or intent. Bibliography lists 4 sources.
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6 pages (~225 words per page)
File: TG15_TGanfarm.rtf
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was a British subject who had witnessed the oppression of imperial colonialism, and it sickened him. He then became a devout Marxist and Stalinist, but became soured on its
principles during a visit to Spain during the Spanish Civil War (Peters 90). His idealistic eyes had been opened to the manipulative deceptions of a political regime that was
every bit as oppressive as so-called Western democracy (Peters 90). Orwell did not want people to become as disillusioned with the system as he was, so in the early
1940s, he decided to write a modern-day fairy tale that was a thinly disguised allegory on the failure of Stalinism to remain true to the communist principles articulated by Karl
Marx. The revolutionary novel, entitled Animal Farm, was first published in 1945, and in a subsequent preface, Orwell explained that his intentions for writing the book were to expose
"the Soviet myth in a story that could be easily understood by almost anyone" (405). Orwells tale would analyze "Marxs theory from the animals point of view. To
them it was clear that the concept of a class struggle between humans was pure illusion, since whenever it was necessary to exploit animals, all humans united against them: the
true struggle is between animals and humans" (406). In Animal Farm, George Orwells main achievement was in his simplistic, yet insightful way of telling the story of how easily the
masses can be deceived, and how even the most Utopian of political philosophies can fall victim to corruption. Orwell correctly recognized that the most effective way of having his
message reach the greatest number of people was to have it accessible to everyone from the young student to the adult of limited education to the Ph.D. candidate. Regardless
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