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Essay / Research Paper Abstract
A 5 page paper that, first of all, offer a concise book review of Animal Farm, summarizing the plot and stating the writer's reaction (roughly 1.5 pages). Then, the writer offers a formal book analysis that argues that Animal Farm can be read as a feminist fable, as well as one that mirrors historical events in the former Soviet Union. Bibliography lists 3 sources.
Page Count:
5 pages (~225 words per page)
File: D0_khoranfr.rtf
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Unformatted sample text from the term paper:
the Russian Revolution in the realities of the Soviet Union, while also explaining the rise to power of dictator Josef Stalin. The allegory takes the form of a fable, which
pictures a barnyard revolt of the farm animals and their attempt to establish an animal-run egalitarian society. The idealism of the revolt quickly evolves into a new society, in which
the pigs take the place of the animals previous oppressor, Mr. Jones, and are even more ruthless. Much of the novel is the persecution suffered by the rest of the
animals due to the pigs oppression. One of the most memorable scenes is when Napoleon, the pig dictator, sells Boxer the horse, who has believed in the revolution despite all
abuses, to the glue factor for money to buy whiskey. This symbolic betrayal generates outrage in the reader no matter how many times it is reread. As this suggests,
this fable says more about the injustice, inequality and inhumanity of the Soviet system than a long-winded political dissertation or any other scholarly effort that attempts to be analytical. This
is because it goes right to the heart of the historical evolution of Soviet Communism and bypasses rationalizations and ideologies, presenting an ideal way of viewing how this human travesty
could have happened when the intentions were so noble. In other words, this novel/fable is a "must read" for anyone trying to understand the history of the former Soviet Union,
or the nature of revolution in general. Novel study In Animal Farm, George Orwell creates an allegory that perfectly represents the early beginning of the Soviet Union and the
betrayal of the idealistic socialist principles that fired the Russian Revolution. The fable is, quite intentionally, a mirror image of a human society, complete in all its foibles and failings.
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