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Abuse Of Power In Animal Farm

Decent Essays

During the Russian Revolution, there were different leaders who had excessive power over the people. Essentially Animal Farm was based off the Russian Revolution, but not knowing much about the revolution one can adhere that most leaders in Animal Farm were unfair. This was consequently the message Orwell was trying to let us understand as readers. Whenever there’s a leader with absolute power, there will always be an abuse of power, for selfish needs. Orwell makes this statement throughout the story with verbal, dramatic and situational irony. Orwell essentially believes in Socialism instead of Communism and he writes Animal Farm to show people the truth of the Russian Revolution.

At the start of the novel, Mr. Jones is presented to be a drunk person who didn’t care much for his animals and usually let them starve. “Mr. Jones, of the Manor Farm, had locked the hen-houses for the night, but was too drunk to remember to shut the popholes.”(Orwell 15). Mr. Jones was considered to be Czar Nicholas II in the Russian Revolution, and this description is a way for Orwell to say that he was a horrible leader. Mr. Jones only used the …show more content…

Old Major sounds like he cares about the animal’s safety but he doesn’t realize that once they have the leadership they will abuse it. From the start of the novel the pigs had more superiority than the rest of the animals and the hints were shown when they sat closest to the platform, in chapter 1. In addition to this, the pigs directed the revolution and they were the ones who took leadership after Jones was out. Orwell believed that revolution leads to power, in this case, the pigs or Stalin were the ones who had power, but once they acquire the power they abused it. Orwell shows this throughout the book by showing how Napoleon treated them the same way Jones did but used irony in the fact that the animals didn’t realize

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