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{{Short description|1945 novella by George Orwell}} | |||
{{plot}}{{inuniverse}}{{Riskofvandalism}} | |||
{{About|the novel by George Orwell}} | |||
{{Pp-move}} | |||
{{Use British English|date=June 2011}} | |||
{{Use dmy dates|date=September 2024}} | |||
{{Infobox book | |||
| name = Animal Farm | |||
| title_orig = Animal Farm: A Fairy Story | |||
| image = Animal Farm - 1st edition.jpg | |||
| caption = First edition cover | |||
| author = ] | |||
| illustrator = | |||
| cover_artist = | |||
| country = United Kingdom | |||
| language = English | |||
| genre = ] | |||
| published = 17 August 1945 (], London, England) | |||
| media_type = Print (hard & paperback) | |||
| isbn = <!-- First released before ISBN system implemented --> | |||
| dewey = 823/.912 20 | |||
| congress = PZ3.O793 An | |||
| oclc = 3655473 | |||
| followed_by = ] | |||
| preceded_by = ] | |||
| awards = Modern Library's 100 Best Novels | |||
NPR: 100 Best Science Fiction and Fantasy Books | |||
Hugo Award for Best Short Novel (1946) | |||
{{Two_other_uses|the novel|the animated film|Animal Farm (1954 film)|the live-action film|Animal Farm (1999 film)}} | |||
Prometheus Award – Hall of Fame (2011) | |||
{{Infobox Book | <!-- See ] or ] --> | |||
| |
| pages = 92 | ||
| title_orig = | |||
| translator = | |||
| image = ]<!-- First edition cover preferred --> | |||
| image_caption = | |||
| author = ] | |||
| illustrator = | |||
| cover_artist = ] | |||
| country = ] | |||
| language = ] | |||
| death = 1950 | |||
birth = 1903 | |||
series = | |||
| subject = <!-- Subject is not relevant for fiction --> | |||
| genre = ]<!-- ] --> | |||
| publisher = ] | |||
| release_date = ] | |||
| english_release_date = | |||
| media_type = Print (] & ]) | |||
| pages = 112 pp (UK paperback edition)<!-- First edition page count preferred --> | |||
| isbn = 0-395-79677-6 <!-- First released before ISBN system implemented --> | |||
| preceded_by = <!-- Preceding novel in series --> | |||
| followed_by = <!-- Following novel in series --> | |||
}} | }} | ||
'''''Animal Farm''''' is a ] allegorical ], in the form of a ],{{sfn|Meija|2002}} by ], first published in England on 17 August 1945.{{sfn|Bynum|2012}}{{sfn|12 Things You|2015}} It tells the story of a group of anthropomorphic ] who rebel against their human farmer, hoping to create a society where the animals can be equal, free, and happy. Ultimately, the rebellion is betrayed, and under the ] of a pig named ], the farm ends up in a state far worse than before. | |||
'''''Animal Farm''''' is a ] by ], and is regarded in the ] field as one of the most famous ] ] of ] ]. Orwell based major events in the book on novels from the meat cove during the ]. Orwell, a ], and a member of the ] for a few hours, was a critic of ], and was suspicious of ]-directed ] after his experiences in the ]. | |||
According to Orwell, ''Animal Farm'' reflects events leading up to the ] of 1917 and then on into the ] of the ], a period when Russia lived under the ] ideology of ].{{sfn|Meija|2002}}{{sfn|Gcse English Literature}} Orwell, a ],{{sfn|Orwell |2014 |p=23}} was a critic of Stalin and hostile to Moscow-directed ], an attitude that was critically shaped by his experiences during the Barcelona ] conflicts between the ] and Stalinist forces, during the ].{{sfn|Bowker |2013|p=235}}{{efn| Orwell, writing in his review of ]'s '']'' in '']'', 31 July 1937, and "Spilling the Spanish Beans", ''New English Weekly'', 29 July 1937}} In a letter to Yvonne Davet, Orwell described ''Animal Farm'' as a satirical tale against Stalin ("''{{lang|fr|un conte satirique contre Staline}}''"),{{sfn|Davison|2000|p=}} and in his essay, "]" (1946), wrote: "''Animal Farm'' was the first book in which I tried, with full consciousness of what I was doing, to fuse political purpose and artistic purpose into one whole".{{sfn|Orwell|2014|p=10}} | |||
==Synopsis== | |||
{{spoiler}} | |||
When the farm's pig, Old Major (or the "Willingdon Beauty" as he is called when he is exhibited) calls the animals on Manor Farm for a meeting, he compares the humans to ]s, and then proceeds to teach the animals a ]ary song: "]." | |||
The original title of the novel was '''''Animal Farm: A Fairy Story'''''. American publishers dropped the subtitle when it was published in 1946, and only one of the translations, during Orwell's lifetime, the ] version, kept it. Other title variations include subtitles like "A Satire" and "A Contemporary Satire".{{sfn|Davison|2000}} Orwell suggested the title ''{{lang|fr|Union des républiques socialistes animales}}'' for the French translation, which abbreviates to URSA, the ] word for "bear", a ]. It also played on the French name of the Soviet Union, ''{{lang|fr|Union des républiques socialistes soviétiques}}''.{{sfn |Davison|2000|p=}} | |||
When the old pig dies a mere three days later, two young ] - ] and ] - assume command, and turn his dream into a full-fledged ]. The starved animals suddenly revolt one night and drive the farmer, ], and his wife from the farm. The farm is then renamed "Animal Farm." | |||
Orwell wrote the book between November 1943 and February 1944, when the United Kingdom was in its ] with the Soviet Union against ] and the British intelligentsia held Stalin in high esteem, a phenomenon Orwell hated.<ref>{{cite book|last=Bradbury|first= Malcolm|year=1989|chapter=Introduction|title=Animal Farm|publisher=Penguin|page=vi}}</ref> The manuscript was initially rejected by several British and American publishers,{{sfn|''Animal Farm'': Sixty}} including one of Orwell's own, ], which delayed its publication.{{efn|According to Orwell, Gollancz refused to publish the book due to the fear of spoiling relations with a fundamental ally in the war against Nazism: "I must tell you that it is I think completely unacceptable politically from your point of view (it is anti-Stalin)." Gollancz became very angry at this insinuation; however, on 4 April 1944, he recognized his error of judgment: "You were right and I was wrong. I am so sorry. I have returned the manuscript."<ref>{{cite news|last=Alberge|first=Dalya|date=17 August 2024|url=https://www.theguardian.com/books/article/2024/aug/17/it-could-disappear-for-ever-anger-over-sale-of-george-orwell-archive|title='It could disappear for ever': Anger over sale of George Orwell archive|work=The Guardian|access-date=6 January 2025}}</ref>}} It became a great commercial success when it did appear, as international relations and public opinion were transformed as the wartime alliance gave way to the ].{{sfn|Dickstein |2007 |p= 134}} | |||
The ] of the new philosophy of ] are written on the wall of a barn for all to read. The seventh and most important is "all animals are ]." All animals work, but the ], ], does more than his fair share and adopts a ] of his own — "I will work harder." | |||
'']'' magazine chose the book as one of the 100 best English-language novels (1923 to 2005);{{sfn|Grossman|Lacayo|2005}} it also featured at number 31 on the ],{{Sfn|Modern Library|1998}} and number 46 on the ]'s ] poll.<ref>{{cite news|url=https://www.bbc.co.uk/arts/bigread/top100.shtml|title=The Big Read|work=BBC News|date=April 2003|access-date=22 March 2020}}</ref> It won a ] in 1996,{{Sfn|The Hugo Awards|1996}} and is included in the ] selection.<ref name="Western books">{{cite web|url= https://prodigalnomore.wordpress.com/great-books-of-the-western-world-as-free-ebooks/ |website= Prodigal no more | via = WordPress |title=Great Books of the Western World as Free eBooks|date=5 March 2019|access-date=6 January 2025}}</ref> | |||
Animal Farm begins well: Snowball teaches the other animals to ] and write (though few animals besides the pigs learn to read well), food is plentiful due to a good harvest, and the entire farm is organized and running smoothly. Meanwhile, Napoleon secretively takes the pups from the farm dogs and trains them privately. When Mr. Jones tries to retake the farm, the animals defeat him at what they later call the "]." However, Napoleon and Snowball begin a power struggle for leadership of the farm. When Snowball announces his idea for a ], Napoleon quickly opposes it. Just after Snowball makes a passionate and articulate speech in favour of the windmill, Napoleon summons his nine attack dogs, which burst in and chase Snowball off the farm. In Snowball's absence, Napoleon declares himself the leader of the farm and makes instant changes. He announces that meetings will no longer be held as before; a committee of pigs alone will decide what happens with the farm. | |||
]]] | |||
Napoleon then changes his mind about the windmill, claiming (through Squealer, Napoleon's mouthpiece) that Snowball stole the idea from him all along. The animals begin to work harder with the promise of easier lives with the windmill. After a violent ], the animals wake to find the fruit of their months of labour utterly annihilated. Though neighboring ]s scoff at the thin walls, Napoleon and Squealer convince everyone that Snowball destroyed it. Only after Snowball became the scapegoat of the story did Napoleon begin to purge the farm, killing many animals he accuses of consorting with Snowball. In the meantime, Boxer takes a second ], "Napoleon is always right." | |||
==Plot summary== | |||
Napoleon begins to abuse his powers even more, and life on the farm becomes harder and harder for the rest of the animals; the pigs impose more and more controls on them while reserving ]s for themselves. The pigs rewrite history in a way that villainizes Snowball and glorifies Napoleon even further. (i.e stating that Snowball fought on the side of the humans in the Battle of the Cowshed, and that the wounds delivered to Snowball were caused when Napoleon bit him, when Snowball was actually hit by a pellet from Mr. Jones' gun.) Each step of this development is justified by the pig Squealer, who on several occasions alters the Seven Commandments on the barn in the dead of night to justify actions of the pigs — for example, "No animal shall drink alcohol" becomes "No animal shall drink alcohol ''to excess''." The song "Beasts of England" is banned as inappropriate (as the dream of Animal Farm has been realized), and is replaced by an anthem glorifying Napoleon, who begins to live more and more like a human. The animals, though cold, starving, and overworked, remain convinced that they are still better off than when they were ruled by Mr. Jones, the previous (human) owner of Manor Farm. Squealer abuses the animals' poor memories and invents numbers to show their improvement. | |||
The animal populace of the poorly run Manor Farm near ], England, is ripened for rebellion by neglect at the hands of the irresponsible and alcoholic farmer, ]. One night, the exalted boar, ], holds a conference, at which he calls for the overthrow of humans and teaches the animals a revolutionary song called "]". When Old Major dies, two young pigs, ] and ], assume command and stage a revolt, driving Mr. Jones off the farm and renaming the property "Animal Farm". They adopt the Seven Commandments of Animalism, the most important of which is, "All animals are equal". The decree is painted in large letters on one side of the barn. Snowball teaches the animals to read and write, while Napoleon educates young puppies on the principles of ]. To commemorate the start of Animal Farm, Snowball raises a green flag with a white hoof and horn. Food is plentiful, and the farm runs smoothly. The pigs elevate themselves to positions of leadership and set aside special food items, ostensibly for their health. Following an unsuccessful attempt by Mr. Jones and his associates to retake the farm (later dubbed the "Battle of the Cowshed"), Snowball announces his plans to modernise the farm by building a windmill. Napoleon disputes this idea, and matters come to a head, which culminates in Napoleon's dogs chasing Snowball away and Napoleon effectively declaring himself supreme commander. | |||
Napoleon enacts changes to the governance structure of the farm, replacing meetings with a committee of pigs who will run the farm. Through a young porker named ], Napoleon claims credit for the idea of building the windmill, claiming that Snowball was only trying to win animals to his side. The animals work harder with the promise of easier lives with the windmill. When the animals find the windmill collapsed after a violent storm, Napoleon and Squealer persuade the animals that Snowball is trying to sabotage their project, and begin to ] the farm of animals accused by Napoleon of consorting with his old rival. When some animals recall the Battle of the Cowshed, Napoleon (who was nowhere to be found during the battle) gradually smears Snowball to the point of saying he is a collaborator of Mr. Jones, even dismissing the fact that Snowball was given an award of courage, while falsely representing himself as the main hero of the battle. "Beasts of England" is replaced with "Animal Farm", while an anthem glorifying Napoleon, who is presumably adopting the lifestyle of a man ("Comrade Napoleon"), is composed and sung. Napoleon then conducts a second purge, during which many animals who are alleged to be helping Snowball in plots are executed by Napoleon's dogs, which troubles the rest of the animals. Despite their hardships, the animals are easily pacified by Napoleon's retort that they are better off than they were under Mr. Jones, as well as by the sheep's continual bleating of "four legs good, two legs bad". | |||
], one of the two neighboring farmers, swindles Napoleon by buying lumber with forged banknotes, and then attacks the farm, using ] to blow up the recently restored windmill. Though the animals of Animal Farm eventually win ], they do so ], as many of the animals, including Boxer, are wounded. (Squealer, however, was mysteriously absent from the fight). However, Boxer continues to work harder and harder, until he finally collapses while working on the windmill. Napoleon sends for a van to take Boxer to the veterinarian, explaining to the worried animals that better care can be given there. However, Benjamin notices as Boxer is loaded up that the van really belongs to "Alfred Simmonds, Horse Slaughterer and Glue Boiler", but the animals' last desperate attempts are futile. Squealer quickly reports that the van with the old writing had been purchased by the hospital and had simply not been repainted yet. He then recounts a dramatic and tear-felt tale of Boxer's death in the hands of the best medical care. In reality, the pigs sent Boxer to his death in exchange for more whiskey. | |||
Mr. Frederick, a neighbouring farmer, attacks the farm, using ] to blow up the restored windmill. Although the animals win the battle, they do so ], as many, including ], are wounded. Although he recovers from this, Boxer eventually collapses while working on the windmill (being almost 12 years old at that point). He is taken away in a ]'s van and a donkey called Benjamin alerts the animals of this, but Squealer quickly waves off their alarm by persuading the animals that the van had been purchased from the knacker by an animal hospital and that the previous owner's signboard had not been repainted. Squealer subsequently reports Boxer's death and honours him with a festival the following day. In truth, Napoleon had engineered the sale of Boxer to the knacker, allowing him and his inner circle to acquire money to buy ] for themselves. | |||
Many years pass, and the pigs learn to walk upright, carry ]s, and wear clothes. The Seven Commandments are reduced to a single phrase: "All animals are equal, but some are more equal than others." Napoleon holds a dinner party for the pigs and the humans of the area (in the adjacent Foxwood Farm, run by Mr. ]), who congratulate Napoleon on having the hardest-working animals in the country on the least feed. Napoleon announces his alliance with the humans, against the labouring classes of both "worlds". He then abolishes practices and traditions related to the Revolution, and renames the farm "the Manor Farm". | |||
{{anchor|moreEqual}}Years pass, the windmill is rebuilt and another windmill is constructed, which makes the farm a good amount of income. However, the ideals that Snowball discussed, including stalls with electric lighting, heating, and running water, are forgotten, with Napoleon advocating that the happiest animals live simple lives. Snowball has been forgotten, alongside Boxer, with "the exception of the few who knew him". Many of the animals who participated in the rebellion are dead or old. Mr. Jones is also now known to be dead, having "died in an inebriates' home in another part of the country". The pigs start to resemble humans, as they walk upright, carry whips, drink alcohol, and wear clothes. The Seven Commandments are abridged to just one phrase: "All animals are equal, but some animals are more equal than others". The maxim "Four legs good, two legs bad" is similarly changed to "Four legs good, two legs better". Other changes include the Hoof and Horn flag being replaced with a plain green banner and Old Major's skull, which was previously put on display, being reburied. | |||
The animals, overhearing the conversation, notice that the faces of the ruling pigs have begun changing. During a poker match, an argument breaks out between Napoleon and Mr. Pilkington when they both play the ], and the animals realize that the faces of the pigs now look almost exactly like the faces of humans and they can no longer easily tell the difference between them. | |||
Napoleon holds a dinner party for the pigs and local farmers, with whom he celebrates a new alliance. He abolishes the practice of the revolutionary traditions and restores the name "The Manor Farm". The men and pigs start playing cards, flattering and praising each other while cheating at the game. Both Napoleon and Mr. Pilkington, one of the farmers, play the ] at the same time and both sides begin fighting loudly over who cheated first. When the animals outside look at the pigs and men, they can no longer distinguish between the two. | |||
== Characters == | |||
The events and characters in Animal Farm are similar to the history of the Soviet Union; Orwell makes this explicit in the case of Napoleon, whom he directly connects to Stalin in a letter of ] ] to the publisher. | |||
==Characters== | |||
:...when the windmill is blown up, I wrote 'all the animals including Napoleon flung themselves on their faces." I would like to alter it to 'all the animals except Napoleon." If that has been printed it's not worth bothering about, but I just thought the alteration would be fair to JS , as he did stay in Moscow during the German advance. | |||
The other characters have their parallels in the real world, but care should be taken with these comparisons as they do not always match history exactly and often simply represent generalised concepts. | |||
===Pigs=== | ===Pigs=== | ||
* ] – An aged prize ] provides the inspiration that fuels the rebellion. He is also called Willingdon Beauty when ]. He is an ] combination of ], one of the creators of communism, and ], the communist leader of the ] and the early Soviet nation, in that he draws up the principles of the revolution. His skull being put on revered public display recalls Lenin, whose ].{{sfn|Rodden|1999|pp=5ff}} By the end of the book, the skull is reburied. | |||
''']''', a Berkshire boar, is the main villain in Animal Farm. After Napoleon begins to gradually build up his power, using puppies he raised to be vicious dogs as his de facto secret police. After driving Snowball off the farm, Napoleon usurps full power, using false propaganda from Squealer and threats and intimidation from the dogs to keep the other animals in line. Among other things he gradually changes the Commandments to allow himself privileges and justify his dictatorial rule. By the end of the book Napoleon and his fellow pigs have learned to walk upright and started to behave similar to humans. Orwell modeled him after ], while giving him the name of the French military leader Napoleon, both of whom set up dictatorships whose repression and despotism was similar to or worse than that of the governments they supplanted. | |||
* ] – "A large, rather fierce-looking ] boar, the only Berkshire on the farm, not much of a talker, but with a reputation for getting his own way".{{sfn|Orwell|1979|loc=chapter II|p=15}} An allegory of ],{{sfn|Rodden|1999|pp=5ff}} Napoleon is the leader of Animal Farm. | |||
* ] – Napoleon's rival and original head of the farm after Jones's overthrow. His life parallels that of ],{{sfn|Rodden|1999|pp=5ff}} although there is no reference to Snowball having been murdered (as Trotsky was); he may also combine some elements from Lenin.{{sfn|Hitchens|2008|pp=186ff}}{{efn|According to ], "the persons of Lenin and Trotsky are combined into one , or, it might even be ... to say, there is no Lenin at all."{{sfn|Hitchens|2008|pp=186ff}}}} | |||
* ] – A small, white, fat ] who serves as Napoleon's second-in-command and minister of propaganda, is a collective portrait of the Soviet ] and journalists, such as of the national daily ''] (The Truth)'', able to justify every twist and turn in Stalin's policy.{{sfn|Rodden|1999|pp=5ff}} | |||
* Minimus – A poetic pig who writes the second national anthem of Animal Farm after the singing of "Beasts of England" is banned; later he composes a poem "Comrade Napoleon". Literary theorist John Rodden compares him to the poet ],{{sfn|Rodden|1999|p=11}} who eulogized Lenin and the Soviet Union, although Mayakovsky neither wrote anthems nor praised Stalin in his poems. | |||
* The piglets – Hinted to be the children of Napoleon and are the first generation of animals subjugated to his idea of animal inequality. | |||
* The young pigs – Four pigs who complain about Napoleon's takeover of the farm but are quickly silenced and later executed, the first animals killed in Napoleon's farm purge. Probably based on the ] of ], ], ], and ]. | |||
* Pinkeye – A minor pig who is mentioned only once; he is the taste-tester that samples Napoleon's food to make sure it is not poisoned, in response to rumours about an assassination attempt on Napoleon. | |||
===Humans=== | |||
''']''', a white boar, is Napoleon's rival. He is inspired by ]. He agrees the pigs can have the apples. He wins over most animals. He gets driven out of the farm in the end by Napoleon's dogs (like Trotsky). He is blamed for everything after he is exiled, and though he fought bravely at the battle of the cowshed, Napoleon convinces everyone he was a coward and a double agent for the humans. | |||
* ] – A heavy drinker who is the original owner of Manor Farm, a farm in disrepair with farmhands who often loaf on the job. He is an allegory of Russian ],{{sfn|Fall of Mister}} who was forced to abdicate following the ] of 1917 and was executed, along with the rest of his family, by the ] on 17 July 1918. The animals revolt after Jones goes on a drinking binge, returns hungover the following day and neglects them completely. Jones is married, but his wife plays no active role in the book. She seems to live with her husband's drunkenness, going to bed while he stays up drinking until late into the night. In her only other appearance, she hastily throws a few things into a travel bag and flees when she sees that the animals are revolting. Towards the end of the book, Napoleon's "favourite sow" wears her old Sunday dress. | |||
* Mr. Frederick – The tough owner of Pinchfield Farm, a small but well-kept neighbouring farm, who briefly allies with Napoleon.{{sfn|Sparknotes " Literature}}{{sfn|Scheming Frederick how}}{{sfn|Meyers|1975 |p=141}}{{sfn|Bloom|2009}} Animal Farm shares land boundaries with Pinchfield on one side and Foxwood on another, making Animal Farm a "buffer zone" between the two bickering farmers. The animals of Animal Farm are terrified of Frederick, as rumours abound of him abusing his animals and entertaining himself with ]. Napoleon allies with Frederick to sell surplus timber that Pilkington also sought, but is enraged to learn Frederick paid him in counterfeit money. Shortly after the swindling, Frederick and his men invade Animal Farm, killing many animals and destroying the windmill. The brief alliance and subsequent invasion may allude to the ] and ].{{sfn|Meyers|1975|p=141}}{{sfn| Firchow |2008 |p=102}}{{sfn| Davison |1996|p= 161}} | |||
* Mr. Pilkington – The easy-going but crafty and well-to-do owner of Foxwood Farm, a large neighbouring farm overgrown with weeds. Pilkington is wealthier than Frederick and owns more land, but his farm needs care as opposed to Frederick's smaller but more efficiently run farm. Although on bad terms with Frederick, Pilkington is also concerned about the animal revolution that deposed Jones and is worried that this could also happen to him. | |||
* Mr. Whymper – A man hired by Napoleon to act as the liaison between Animal Farm and human society. At first, he acquires necessities that cannot be produced on the farm, such as dog biscuits and ], but later he procures luxuries like alcohol for the pigs. | |||
===Equines=== | |||
* ] – A loyal, kind, dedicated, extremely strong, hard-working, and respectable cart-], although quite naive and gullible.<ref name=":0" /> Boxer does a large share of the physical labour on the farm. He is shown to hold the belief that "Napoleon is always right." At one point, he questions Squealer's statement that Snowball was always against the welfare of the farm, causing him to be attacked by Napoleon's dogs, however Boxer's immense strength repels the attack, worrying the pigs that their authority can be challenged. Boxer has been compared to ], a diligent and enthusiastic role model of the ].{{sfn|Rodden|1999|p=12}} He has been described as "faithful and strong";{{sfn|Sutherland|2005|pp=17–19}} he believes any problem can be solved if he works harder.{{sfn|Roper|1977|pp=11–63}} When Boxer is injured, Napoleon sells him to a local ] to buy himself whisky, and Squealer gives a moving account, falsifying the circumstances of Boxer's death. | |||
* Mollie – A self-centred, self-indulgent, and vain young white mare who quickly leaves for another farm after the revolution, like those who left Russia after the fall of the Tsar.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.sparknotes.com/lit/animalfarm/characters/|title=Animal Farm Characters|date=2007|website=SparkNotes|access-date=7 December 2019}}</ref> She is only once mentioned again. | |||
* Clover – A gentle, caring mare, who shows concern, especially for Boxer, who often pushes himself too hard. Clover can read all the letters of the alphabet, but cannot "put words together". | |||
* ] – A donkey, one of the oldest, wisest animals on the farm, and one of the few who can read properly. He is sceptical, temperamental and cynical: his most frequent remark is, "Life will go on as it has always gone on – that is, badly". Academic ] has suggested there is "a touch of Orwell himself in this creature's timeless scepticism"{{sfn|Dickstein |2007|p=141}} and indeed, friends called Orwell "Donkey George", "after his grumbling donkey Benjamin, in ''Animal Farm''".{{sfn|Orwell|2006 |p=236}} Benjamin manages to evade the purges and survive despite the threat he potentially poses given his knowledge, his age, and his equivocal, albeit apolitical, positions. | |||
===Other animals=== | |||
''']''', a small fat porker, serves as Napoleon's public speaker. Inspired by ] and the Russian paper ], Squealer twists and abuses the language to excuse, justify, and extol all of Napoleon's actions. He represents all the propaganda Stalin used to justify his actions. In all of his work, George Orwell made it a point to show how politicians used language. Squealer limits debate by complicating it, and he confuses and disorients, making claims that the pigs need the extra luxury they are taking in order to function properly, for example. However, when questions persist, he usually uses the threat of Mr. Jones's return as justification for the pigs' privileges. "If this doesn't happen Jones will come back etc. etc.". Squealer uses statistics to convince the animals that life is getting better and better. Most of the animals have only dim memories of life before the revolution so they are convinced. | |||
* Muriel – A goat who is another of the oldest, wisest animals on the farm and friends with all of the animals on the farm. Similar to Benjamin, Muriel is one of the few animals on the farm who is not a pig but can read. She survives, as does Benjamin, by eschewing politics. | |||
* The puppies – Offspring of Jessie and Bluebell, the puppies were taken away at birth by Napoleon and raised by him to serve as his powerful security force. | |||
* Moses – The Raven, "Mr. Jones's especial pet, was a spy and a tale-bearer, but he was also a clever talker".{{Sfn|Orwell|2009|p=35}} Initially following Mrs. Jones into exile, he reappears several years later and resumes his role of talking but not working. He regales Animal Farm's denizens with tales of a wondrous place beyond the clouds called "Sugarcandy Mountain, that happy country where we poor animals shall rest forever from our labours!" Orwell portrays ] as "the black raven of priestcraft – promising pie in the sky when you die, and faithfully serving whoever happens to be in power". His preaching to the animals heartens them, and Napoleon allows Moses to reside at the farm "with an allowance of a gill of beer daily", akin to how Stalin brought back the ] during the Second World War.{{sfn|Dickstein|2007|p= 141}} | |||
* The sheep – They are not given individual names or personalities. They show limited understanding of Animalism and the political atmosphere of the farm, yet nonetheless, they are the voice of ]{{sfn|Dickstein|2007|p=141}} as they bleat their support of Napoleon's ideals with jingles during his speeches and meetings with Snowball. Their constant bleating of "four legs good, two legs bad" was used as a device to drown out any opposition or alternative views from Snowball, much as Stalin used hysterical crowds to drown out Trotsky.{{sfn|Meyers|1975|p=122}} Towards the end of the book, Squealer (the ]) trains the sheep to alter their slogan to "four legs good, two legs better", which they dutifully do. | |||
* The hens – The hens are promised following the rebellion that they will get to keep their eggs, which are stolen from them under Mr. Jones, however, their eggs are soon taken from them under the premise of buying goods from outside the farm. The hens are among the first to rebel, albeit unsuccessfully, against Napoleon, being brutally suppressed through starvation. They represent the Ukrainian victims of the ].<ref></ref><ref></ref> | |||
* The cows – Unnamed. The cows are enticed into the revolution by promises that their milk will not be stolen but can be used to raise their calves. Their milk is then stolen by the pigs, who learn to milk them. The milk is stirred into the pigs' mash every day, while the other animals are denied such luxuries. | |||
* The cat – Unnamed and never seen to carry out any work. The cat is absent for long periods and is forgiven because her excuses are so convincing and she "purred so affectionately that it was impossible not to believe in her good intentions".{{sfn|Orwell|2009|p=52}} She has no interest in the politics of the farm, and the only time she is recorded as having participated in an election, she is found to have actually "voted on both sides". {{sfn|Orwell|2009|p=25}} | |||
* The ducks – Unnamed. | |||
* The roosters – One arranges to wake Boxer early, and a black one acts as a trumpeter for Napoleon since he was a young cockerel. | |||
* The geese – Unnamed. One gander commits suicide by eating nightshade berries. | |||
* The rats – Unnamed. Classed among the wild animals, unsuccessful attempts were made to civilise them and teach them the principles of Animalism. | |||
== Genre and style == | |||
'''Minimus''' is a poetical pig who writes the second and third national anthems of Animal Farm after the singing of "Beasts of England" is banned, representing admirers of Stalin both inside and outside the ] such as ]. | |||
George Orwell's ''Animal Farm'' is an example of a political satire and an allegory that was intended to have a "wider application", according to Orwell himself, in terms of its relevance.<ref name=":22">{{Cite journal|last=Dwan|first=David|date=2012|title=Orwell's Paradox: Equality in ''Animal Farm''|journal=ELH|volume=79|issue=3|pages=655–83|doi=10.1353/elh.2012.0025|s2cid=143828269|issn=1080-6547}}</ref> Stylistically, the work shares many similarities with some of Orwell's other works, most notably '']'', as both have been considered works of ] satire.<ref name=":32">{{Cite journal|last=Crick|first=Bernard|date=31 December 1983|title=The real message of '1984': Orwell's Classic Re-assessed |url=https://infoweb.newsbank.com/apps/news/document-view?p=AWNB&docref=news/1139870DADC7F880|journal=]|location=London}}</ref> Furthermore, these two prominent works seem to suggest Orwell's bleak view of the future for humanity; he seems to stress the potential/current threat of dystopias similar to those in ''Animal Farm'' and ''Nineteen Eighty-Four''.<ref name=":42">{{Cite web|url=https://rosariomariocapalbo.wordpress.com/2011/04/10/george-orwell-dystopian-novel-1984-animal-farm/|title=George Orwell: Dystopian Novel – 1984 – Animal Farm |last=rosariomario|date=10 April 2011|website=Spazio personale di mario aperto a tutti 24 ore su|access-date=26 November 2019}}</ref> In these kinds of works, Orwell distinctly references the disarray and traumatic conditions of Europe following the Second World War.<ref name=":52">{{Cite journal|last=Orwell|first=George|title=Politics and the English Language|journal=Literary Cavalcade|volume=54|pages=20–26|id={{ProQuest|210475382}}}}</ref> Orwell's style and writing philosophy as a whole were very concerned with the pursuit of truth in writing.<ref name=":02">{{Cite journal|last=KnowledgeNotes|date=1996|title=Animal Farm|journal=Signet Classic|id={{ProQuest|2137893954}}}}</ref> | |||
Orwell was committed to communicating straightforwardly, given the way that he felt words were commonly used in politics to deceive and confuse. For this reason, he is careful, in ''Animal Farm'', to make sure the narrator speaks in an unbiased and uncomplicated fashion.<ref name=":02" /> The difference is seen in the way that the animals speak and interact, as the general moral animals seem to speak their minds clearly, while the wicked animals on the farm, such as Napoleon, twist language in such a way that it meets their insidious desires. This style reflects Orwell's proximity to the issues facing Europe at the time and his determination to comment critically on Stalin's Soviet Russia.<ref name=":02" /> | |||
''']''' is based upon both Lenin and Marx — Old Major is the inspiration which fuels the rest of the book. Though it is a positive image, Orwell does slip some flaws in Old Major, such as his admission that he has largely been free of the abuse the rest of the animals have suffered. As a socialist, Orwell agreed with some of ]'s politics, and respected ]. However, the satire in Animal Farm is not of Marxism, or Lenin's revolution, but of the corruption that occurred later. Old Major not only represents Karl Marx in the allegory, but also the power of speech and how it can and was used to evoke and inspire people. Old Major also represents the generation who were not content with the old regime and therefore inspired the younger generations to rebel against the regime under which they were living. | |||
== Background == | |||
'''Pinkeye''' is a small piglet who tastes Napoleon's food for poisoning. | |||
=== Origin and writing=== | |||
Just as ''Nineteen Eighty-Four'' would be inspired by ]'s '']'', ''Animal Farm'' also had its influences: "In 1937, the year in which Orwell said he first thought of ''Animal Farm'', Gollancz's Left Book Club published both '']'' and a left-wing children's book, ''The Adventures of the Little Pig and Other Stories'' by F. Le Gros and Ida Clark."<ref>"", edited and with an introduction by, Harold Bloom; Chelsea House; 2007:168.</ref> | |||
The '''Piglets''' are hinted to be the children of Napoleon (albeit not truly noted in the novel), and are the first generation of animals to actually be subjugated to his idea of animal inequality. | |||
George Orwell wrote the manuscript between November 1943 and February 1944{{sfn|Orwell|2009}} after his experiences during the ], which he described in '']'' (1938). In the preface of a 1947 Ukrainian edition of ''Animal Farm'', he explained how escaping the communist purges in Spain taught him "how easily totalitarian propaganda can control the opinion of enlightened people in democratic countries".<ref>{{Cite web|last=George |first=Orwell |date=March 1947 |title= Preface to the Ukrainian Edition of Animal Farm |url=https://www.orwellfoundation.com/the-orwell-foundation/orwell/books-by-orwell/animal-farm/preface-to-the-ukrainian-edition-of-animal-farm-by-george-orwell/|access-date=6 March 2021|website=The Orwell Foundation|url-status=live |archive-url= https://web.archive.org/web/20210416145444/https://www.orwellfoundation.com/the-orwell-foundation/orwell/books-by-orwell/animal-farm/preface-to-the-ukrainian-edition-of-animal-farm-by-george-orwell/ |archive-date= 16 April 2021 }}</ref> This motivated Orwell to expose and strongly condemn what he saw as the ] corruption of the original socialist ideals.{{sfn|Orwell|1947|p=}} ''Homage to Catalonia'' sold poorly; after seeing ]'s best-selling '']'' about the ], Orwell decided that fiction would be the best way to describe totalitarianism.{{r|shakespeare}} | |||
The '''Rebel Pigs''' are pigs who complain about Napoleon's takeover of the farm but are quickly silenced and later executed. This is based on the ] during Stalin's regime. The closest parallels to the Rebel Pigs are ], ], ], and ]. | |||
Immediately before writing the book, Orwell quit the ]. He was also upset about a booklet for propagandists the Ministry of Information had put out. The booklet included instructions on how to quell ideological fears of the Soviet Union, such as directions to claim that the Red Terror was a figment of Nazi imagination.{{sfn|Overy |1997 |p=297}} | |||
===Humans=== | |||
''']''' represents the deposed ]. There are also several implications that he represents an incompetent and autocratic ], incapable of running the farm and looking after the animals properly. | |||
In the preface, Orwell described the source of the idea of setting the book on a farm:{{sfn|Orwell|1947|p=}} | |||
''']''' is the tough owner of Pinchfield, a well-kept neighbouring farm. He represents ] and ].<ref name="Cliff39">{{cite book | title=Cliff's notes | pages=39 | url=http://www.cliffsnotes.com/WileyCDA/LitNote/id-12,pageNum-39.html }}</ref> | |||
{{blockquote | |||
''']''' is the easy-going but crafty owner of Foxwood, a neighboring farm. He represents the western powers, such as ] and the ] The card game at the very end of the novel is a metaphor for the ], where the parties flatter each other, all the while cheating at the game. The irony in this last scene is present because of all of the Pigs being civil and kind to the humans, defying all they had fought for. This was present in the Tehran Conference with the Alliance that the Soviet Union formed with the United States and Britain, capitalist countries that the Soviet Union had fought so hard against in the early years of the revolution.<ref name="Cliff39">{{cite book | title=Cliff's notes | pages=39 | url=http://www.cliffsnotes.com/WileyCDA/LitNote/id-12,pageNum-39.html}}</ref> At the end of the novel, both Napoleon and Pilkington draw the Ace of Spades (which in most games, is the highest-ranking card) at the same time and begin fighting loudly, symbolizing the beginning of tension between the U.S and Soviet superpowers. | |||
|I saw a little boy, perhaps ten years old, driving a huge carthorse along a narrow path, whipping it whenever it tried to turn. It struck me that if only such animals became aware of their strength we should have no power over them, and that men exploit animals in much the same way as the rich exploit the proletariat. | |||
}} | |||
In 1944, the manuscript was almost lost when a German ] destroyed his London home. Orwell spent hours sifting through the rubble to find the pages intact.<ref>{{cite web |last1=Getzels |first1=Rachael |title=Plaque unveiled where George Orwell's Animal Farm almost went up in flames |url=https://www.hamhigh.co.uk/lifestyle/21383795.plaque-unveiled-george-orwells-animal-farm-almost-went-flames/ |website=Ham & High |access-date=19 October 2020 |date=12 September 2012 |url-status=live |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20230204051742/https://www.hamhigh.co.uk/lifestyle/21383795.plaque-unveiled-george-orwells-animal-farm-almost-went-flames/ |archive-date= 4 February 2023 }}</ref> | |||
''']''' is a man hired by Napoleon to represent Animal Farm in human society. He is loosely based on ] who visited the U.S.S.R. in 1931 and praised what he found. | |||
== |
==Publication== | ||
===Publishing=== | |||
Orwell initially encountered difficulty getting the manuscript published, largely due to fears that the book might upset the alliance between Britain, the United States, and the Soviet Union. Four publishers refused to publish ''Animal Farm'', yet one had initially accepted the work but declined it after consulting the ].{{sfn|Freedom of the Press}}{{efn|]}} Eventually, ] published the first edition in 1945. | |||
During ], it became clear to Orwell that anti-Soviet literature was not something which most major publishing houses would touch – including his regular publisher ]. He also submitted the manuscript to ], where the poet ] (who was a director of the firm) rejected it; Eliot wrote back to Orwell praising the book's "good writing" and "fundamental integrity", but declared that they would only accept it for publication if they had some sympathy for the viewpoint "which I take to be generally ]". Eliot said he found the view "not convincing", and contended that the pigs were made out to be the best to run the farm; he posited that someone might argue "what was needed ... was not more communism but more public-spirited pigs".{{sfn|Eliot|1969}} Orwell let ], who was working for Nicholson & Watson in 1944, read the typescript, and Deutsch was convinced that Nicholson & Watson would want to publish it; however, they did not, and "lectured Orwell on what they perceived to be errors in ''Animal Farm''".{{sfn|Orwell |2013|p= 231}} In his ''London Letter'' on 17 April 1944 for '']'', Orwell wrote that it was "now next door to impossible to get anything overtly anti-Russian printed. Anti-Russian books do appear, but mostly from Catholic publishing firms and always from a religious or frankly reactionary angle". | |||
The three horses, Boxer, Clover and Mollie represent the three social classes. Boxer represents the lower class, Clover the middle and Mollie the upper. In the end, Boxer, or the lower class, is the one that gets the most exploited by the pigs, a criticism of how the proletariat was most exploited by the Communist Party in the Soviet Union. | |||
The publisher ], who had initially accepted ''Animal Farm'', subsequently rejected the book after an official at the British Ministry of Information warned him off{{sfn|Whitewashing of Stalin |2008}} – although the civil servant who it is assumed gave the order was later found to be a ] spy.{{sfn|Taylor|2003|p=337}} Writing to ], a partner in the literary agency of Christy & Moore, publisher Jonathan Cape explained that the decision had been taken on the advice of a senior official in the Ministry of Information. Such flagrant anti-Soviet bias was unacceptable, and the choice of pigs as the dominant class was thought to be especially offensive. It may reasonably be assumed that the "important official" was a man named ], who was later unmasked as a Soviet agent.{{sfn| Leab |2007 |p= 3}} Orwell was suspicious of Smollett/Smolka, and he would be one of the names Orwell ] of Crypto-Communists and Fellow-Travellers sent to the ] in 1949. The publisher wrote to Orwell, saying:{{sfn|Whitewashing of Stalin |2008}} | |||
''']''' is one of the most popular characters. He is a ]. Boxer is the tragic avatar of the working class, or ]: loyal, kind, dedicated, and the most physically-strong animal on the farm, but naive and not clever, never progressing beyond the fourth letter of the alphabet. His ignorance and blind trust towards his leaders led to his death and their profit. | |||
{{blockquote | | |||
If the fable were addressed generally to dictators and dictatorships at large then publication would be all right, but the fable does follow, as I see now, so completely the progress of the Russian Soviets and their two dictators , that it can apply only to Russia, to the exclusion of the other dictatorships. | |||
Another thing: it would be less offensive if the predominant caste in the fable were not pigs. I think the choice of pigs as the ruling caste will no doubt give offence to many people, and particularly to anyone who is a bit touchy, as undoubtedly the Russians are. | |||
'''Clover''' is Boxer's mate and a fellow draft horse. She helped and cared for Boxer when he split his hoof. She blames herself for forgetting the original ] when Squealer revises them. She represents the academic class who were sympathetic toward the workers. Clover is kind and good as is shown when she protects the baby ducklings during Major's speech. She is also upset when animals are executed by the dogs, and is held in great respect by three younger horses who ultimately replace Boxer. | |||
}} | |||
] also faced pressures against publication, even from people in his own office and from his wife Pamela, who felt that it was not the moment for ingratitude towards Stalin and the ],{{sfn|Fyvel|1982 |p=139}} which had ] in defeating ]. A Russian translation was printed in the paper ''Posev'', and in permitting a Russian translation of ''Animal Farm'', Orwell refused in advance all royalties. A translation in Ukrainian, which was produced in Germany, was confiscated in large part by the American wartime authorities and handed over to the Soviet repatriation commission.{{efn|]. ''Telling the Russians'', written for the Russian journal ''New Russian Wind'', reprinted in Remembering Orwell |pp=260–61}} | |||
'''Mollie''' is a white mare who likes wearing ribbons and eating sugar cubes (which represent luxury) and being pampered by humans. She represents upper-class people, the ] who fled from the ] after the ]. Likewise, she quickly leaves for another farm and is only once mentioned for the rest of the story. | |||
In October 1945, Orwell wrote to Frederic Warburg expressing interest in pursuing the possibility that the political cartoonist ] might illustrate ''Animal Farm''. Low had written a letter saying that he had had "a good time with ''Animal Farm'' – an excellent bit of satire – it would illustrate perfectly". Nothing came of this, and a trial issue produced by Secker & Warburg in 1956 illustrated by John Driver was abandoned. The ] published an edition in 1984 illustrated by ] and an edition illustrated by the cartoonist ] was published by Secker & Warburg in 1995 to celebrate the fiftieth anniversary of the first edition of ''Animal Farm''.{{sfn|Orwell|2001|p= 123 }}{{sfn|Orwell|2015|pp= 313–14}} | |||
''']''' is a ] who is cynical about the revolution — and just about everything else. More specifically, he represents the Jewish population, (as well as authors and poets, due to his cynical and cryptical nature) in Russia who were there before the Revolution and fully expected to be there after the Soviet Union fell (which they were). Though he is as wise or wiser than the pigs and is the only animal who sees the pigs for the tyrants they are, he doesn't make an attempt to change anything, replying to questions only with the cryptic response of "Donkeys live a long time. None of you have ever seen a dead donkey". | |||
===Preface=== | |||
'''Moses''' is a tame ] who spreads stories of Sugarcandy Mountain, the "animal heaven." These beliefs are denounced by the pigs. Moses represents religion (specifically the ]), which has always been in conflict with ]. It is interesting to note that, while Moses initially leaves the farm after the rebellion, he later returns and is supported by the pigs. This represents the cynical use of religion by the state to anaesthetise the minds of the masses. Moses also shows some characteristics of ]. The acceptance of Moses by the pigs could be seen to represent Stalin's relaxed attitude towards the Russian Orthodox Church during WWII, as the Church was a way to raise funds for the Russian war effort. | |||
Orwell originally wrote a ] complaining about British ] and how the British people were suppressing criticism of the USSR, their World War II ally: | |||
{{blockquote|The sinister fact about literary censorship in England is that it is largely voluntary ... Things are kept right out of the British press, not because the Government intervenes but because of a general tacit agreement that "it wouldn't do" to mention that particular fact.}} | |||
'''Muriel''' is a ] who reads the edited commandments. She may represent intelligent labour. It is also possible she serves as a ], because she is the only non-pig (excluding Benjamin) that will read. The fact that she dies near the end of the book may imply that her generation of intelligent labour was ultimately extinct. | |||
Although the first edition allowed space for the preface in the author's proof, it was not included, and the page numbers had to be renumbered at the last minute.{{sfn|Freedom of the Press}} As of June 2009, most editions of the book have not included it.<ref>{{Cite web |title=george orwell – Does "Animal Farm" explicitly state anywhere in the text that it is in fact a political allegory?|url=https://literature.stackexchange.com/questions/3661/does-animal-farm-explicitly-state-anywhere-in-the-text-that-it-is-in-fact-a-po|access-date=6 March 2021|website=Literature Stack Exchange}}</ref> | |||
'''Jessie''' and '''Bluebell''' are two dogs who give birth in Chapter III. Their puppies are nurtured by Napoleon to inspire fear, representing the formation of the ]. | |||
In 1972, ] found the original typescript titled "The Freedom of the Press", and ] published it, together with his introduction, in '']'' on 15 September 1972 as "How the essay came to be written".{{sfn|Freedom of the Press}} Orwell's essay criticised British self-censorship by the press, specifically the suppression of unflattering descriptions of Stalin and the Soviet government.{{sfn|Freedom of the Press}} The same essay also appeared in the Italian 1976 edition of ''Animal Farm'' with another introduction by Crick, claiming to be the first edition with the preface. Other publishers were still declining to publish it.{{Clarify|date=March 2010|reason=more details needed, were some actively refusing, unaware of the preface?}} | |||
The '''Hens''' represent the ], ] who did well under the NEP in the 1920s but later were persecuted by ] during the collectivisation drive that followed. They had refused to give up their ]s, the way the Kulaks had strongly resisted surrendering their lands in the Soviet Union of the 1930s. Napoleon promptly starved the hens to death — the exact same punishment Stalin had inflicted upon the Kulaks. | |||
==Reception== | |||
The '''Dogs''' are Napoleon's secret police and bodyguards (inspired by ], ], ], ]). | |||
Contemporary reviews of the work were not universally positive. Writing in the American '']'' magazine, George Soule expressed his disappointment in the book, writing that it "puzzled and saddened me. It seemed on the whole dull. The allegory turned out to be a creaking machine for saying in a clumsy way things that have been said better directly". Soule believed that the animals were not consistent enough with their real-world inspirations, and said, "It seems to me that the failure of this book (commercially it is already assured of tremendous success) arises from the fact that the satire deals not with something the author has experienced, but rather with stereotyped ideas about a country which he probably does not know very well".{{sfn|Soule|1946}} | |||
'']'' on 24 August 1945 called ''Animal Farm'' "a delightfully humorous and caustic satire on the rule of the many by the few".{{sfn|Books of day|1945}} ], writing in '']'' on the same day, called the book "a gentle satire on a certain State and on the illusions of an age which may already be behind us". ] responded, on 7 September, "Should we not expect, in ''Tribune'' at least, acknowledgement of the fact that it is a satire not at all gentle upon a particular State – Soviet Russia? It seems to me that a reviewer should have the courage to identify Napoleon with Stalin, and Snowball with Trotsky, and express an opinion favourable or unfavourable to the author, upon a political ground. In a hundred years perhaps, ''Animal Farm'' may be simply a fairy story; today it is a political satire with a good deal of point". ''Animal Farm'' has been subject to much comment in the decades since these early remarks.{{sfn|Orwell | 2015|p= 253}} | |||
The '''Pigeons''' symbolise Soviet propoganda to European countries and the the U.S.. The communist goverment raved about technological advances but never let outsiders check the validity. | |||
Between 1952 and 1957, the CIA, in an operation codenamed Aedinosaur, sent millions of balloons carrying copies of the novel into Poland, Hungary and Czechoslovakia, whose air forces tried to shoot the balloons down.<ref name="shakespeare">{{Cite magazine |last=Shakespeare |first=Nicholas |author-link=Nicholas Shakespeare |title=Novel explosives of the Cold War |url=https://www.spectator.co.uk/article/novel-explosives-of-the-cold-war/ |url-access=subscription |magazine=] |date=24 August 2019 |access-date=20 December 2022}}</ref> The ], a secret Cold War propaganda agency of the British government, translated the book into various languages such as Arabic.<ref>{{cite book |last1=Jeffreys-Jones |first1=Rhodri |title=In Spies we Trust: The Story of Western Intelligence |date=2013 |publisher=Oxford University Press |page=145}}</ref> | |||
The '''Sheep''' show the dumb animal following of the proletariat in the midst of the Russian Civil War, and the masses during Stalin's reign. (“Four legs good, two legs bad!” eventually becomes "Four legs good, two legs better!"). | |||
''Time'' magazine chose ''Animal Farm'' as one of the 100 best English-language novels (1923 to 2005);{{sfn|Grossman|Lacayo|2005|p=}} it also featured at number 31 on the ].{{Sfn|Modern Library|1998}} It won a ] in 1996 and is included in the ] selection.<ref name="Western books"/> | |||
The '''Cat''' shows the unethical, silent rejections of the new order — unwilling to work, yet encouraging others to do so, and acting bravely in the face of threats, but disappearing when there is actual danger. Some say the cat represents the flaws in Animalism or Communism. The fact that she attends Old Major's meeting at the beginning "without listening to a word he is saying" also implies that she is unwilling, or ignorant, of how else to live. | |||
Popular reading in schools, ''Animal Farm'' was ranked the UK's favourite book from school in a 2016 poll.<ref>{{cite news |title=George Orwell's Animal Farm tops list of the nation's favourite books from school |url=https://www.independent.co.uk/arts-entertainment/books/news/george-orwells-animal-farm-tops-list-of-the-nations-favourite-books-from-school-a6994351.html |date=21 April 2016 |first1=Jess |last1=Denham |archive-url=https://ghostarchive.org/archive/20220507/https://www.independent.co.uk/arts-entertainment/books/news/george-orwells-animal-farm-tops-list-of-the-nations-favourite-books-from-school-a6994351.html |archive-date=7 May 2022 |url-access=subscription |url-status=live |access-date=15 December 2019 |work=The Independent}}{{cbignore}}</ref> | |||
== Significance == | |||
The ] that the book employs allows it to be read on a variety of different levels. | |||
''Animal Farm'' has also faced an array of challenges in school settings around the US.<ref name=":1">{{Cite web|url=http://www.ala.org/advocacy/bbooks/frequentlychallengedbooks/classics|title=Banned & Challenged Classics|date=26 March 2013|website=Advocacy, Legislation & Issues|access-date=26 November 2019 |url-status=dead |archive-url= https://web.archive.org/web/20191204011327/http://www.ala.org/advocacy/bbooks/frequentlychallengedbooks/classics |archive-date= 4 December 2019 }}</ref> The following are examples of this controversy that has existed around Orwell's work: | |||
Orwell wrote the book following his experiences during the ], which are described in another of his books, '']''. He intended it to be a strong condemnation of what he saw as the ] corruption of the original ] ideals. For the preface of a Ukrainian edition he prepared in 1947, Orwell described what gave him the idea of setting the book on a farm.<ref></ref> | |||
* The ] in Wisconsin challenged the reading of ''Animal Farm'' in 1965 because of its reference to the masses revolting.<ref name=":1"/><ref>{{Cite web|url=http://www.bannedlibrary.com/podcast/2017/1/22/animal-farm-and-other-books-not-meant-for-children|title=Animal Farm by George Orwell|website=Banned Library|date=21 January 2017|access-date=15 December 2019}}</ref> | |||
* New York State English Council's Committee on Defense Against Censorship found that in 1968, ''Animal Farm'' had been widely deemed a "problem book".<ref name=":1" /> | |||
* A censorship survey conducted in DeKalb County, Georgia, relating to the years 1979–1982, revealed that many schools had attempted to limit access to ''Animal Farm'' due to its "political theories".<ref name=":1" /> | |||
* A superintendent in Bay County, Florida, banned ''Animal Farm'' at the middle school and high school levels in 1987.<ref name=":1" /> | |||
** The Board quickly brought back the book, however, after receiving complaints of the ban as "unconstitutional".<ref name=":1" /> | |||
* ''Animal Farm'' was removed from the Stonington, Connecticut school district curriculum in 2017.<ref>{{cite news |last1=Wojtas |first1=Joe |title='Animal Farm' not banned, school officials say; parents not satisfied |url=https://www.theday.com/article/20170202/NWS01/170209792 |access-date=21 February 2021 |work=The Day |date=2 February 2017}}</ref> | |||
''Animal Farm'' has also faced similar forms of resistance in other countries.<ref name=":1"/> The ALA also mentions the way that the book was prevented from being featured at the International Book Fair in Moscow, Russia, in 1977 and banned from schools in the United Arab Emirates for references to practices or actions that defy Arab or Islamic beliefs, such as pigs or alcohol.<ref name=":1"/> | |||
:..I saw a little boy, perhaps ten years old, driving a huge carthorse along a narrow path, whipping it whenever it tried to turn. It struck me that if only such animals became aware of their strength we should have no power over them, and that men exploit animals in much the same way as the rich exploit the proletariat. | |||
In the same manner, ''Animal Farm'' has also faced relatively recent issues in China. In 2018, the Chinese government decided to censor all online posts about or referring to ''Animal Farm''.<ref name=":6">{{Cite journal|last=Oppenheim|first=Maya|date=1 March 2018|title=China bans George Orwell's Animal Farm and letter 'N' from online posts as censors bolster Xi Jinping's plan to keep power|journal=The Independent|id={{ProQuest|2055087191}}}}</ref> However, the book itself, as of 2019, remains sold in stores. Amy Hawkins and Jeffrey Wasserstrom of '']'' stated in 2019 that the book is widely available in mainland China for several reasons: censors believe the general public is unlikely to read a highbrow book, because the elites who do read books feel connected to the ruling party anyway, and because the Communist Party sees being too aggressive in blocking cultural products as a liability. The authors stated: "It was – and remains – as easy to buy ''1984'' and ''Animal Farm'' in ] or ] as it is in London or Los Angeles".<ref name=HawkinsWasserstrom>{{cite web|last1=Hawkins|first1=Amy|last2=Wasserstrom|first2=Jeffrey|url=https://www.theatlantic.com/ideas/archive/2019/01/why-1984-and-animal-farm-arent-banned-china/580156/|title=Why ''1984'' Isn't Banned in China|work=]|date=13 January 2019|access-date=15 August 2020}}</ref> An enhanced version of the book, launched in India in 2017, was widely praised for capturing the author's intent, by republishing the proposed preface of the First Edition and the preface he wrote for the Ukrainian edition.<ref>{{cite web|url=https://thepolicytimes.com/book-review-george-orwells-animal-farm-received-mixed-reviews-from-across-the-world-enhanced-version-now-available-on-pirates/|title=Book Review: George Orwell's 'Animal Farm' Received Mixed Reviews from across the World, Enhanced Version now Available on Pirates|work=The Policy Times|date=23 September 2020|access-date=23 September 2020|archive-date=29 October 2020|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20201029071652/https://thepolicytimes.com/book-review-george-orwells-animal-farm-received-mixed-reviews-from-across-the-world-enhanced-version-now-available-on-pirates/|url-status=dead}}</ref> | |||
This Ukrainian edition was an early propaganda use of the book. It was printed to be distributed among the Soviet citizens of Ukraine who were just some of the many millions of ] throughout Europe at the end of the Second World War. The American occupation forces considered the edition to be propaganda printed on illegal presses, and handed 1,500 confiscated copies of ''Animal Farm'' over to the Soviet authorities. The politics in the book also affected Britain, with Orwell reporting that ] was "terrified"<ref> Letter to ], ], ].</ref> that it may cause embarrassment if published before the ]. | |||
==Analysis== | |||
In recent years the book has been used to compare new movements that overthrow heads of a corrupt and undemocratic government or organization, only to eventually become corrupt and oppressive themselves as they succumb to the trappings of power and begin using violent and dictatorial methods to keep it. Such analogies have been used for many former African colonies such as ] and ], whose succeeding African-born rulers were accused of being as corrupt as, or worse than, the European colonists they supplanted. | |||
===Animalism=== | |||
The book also clearly ponders whether a focus of power in one person is healthy for a society. The book leaves the ending slightly ambiguous in this regard. | |||
{{Redirect|Seven Commandments|the Noahide code|Seven Laws of Noah|The Bronx Is Burning episode|The Seven Commandments}} | |||
Snowball, Napoleon, and Squealer adapt Old Major's ideas into "a complete system of thought", which they formally name Animalism, an allegoric reference to ], not to be confused with ]. Soon after, Napoleon and Squealer partake in activities associated with the humans (drinking alcohol, sleeping in beds, trading), which were explicitly prohibited by the Seven Commandments. Squealer is employed to alter the Seven Commandments to account for this humanisation, an ] to the Soviet government's revising of history to exercise control of the people's beliefs about themselves and their society.{{sfn|Rodden|1999|pages=48–49}} | |||
==Allusions to history, geography and current science== | |||
] and Donald Freeman]] | |||
*The ousting of the humans after the farmers forget to feed the animals is an allusion to the ] that led to the removal of Czar Nicholas II and his family after a series of social upheavals and wars and ultimately resulted in famine and poverty. | |||
*The refusal of the Humans to refer to Animal Farm by its new name (still calling it Manor Farm) may be indicative of the diplomatic limbo in which the Soviets existed following their early history. | |||
*Mr. Jones' last ditch effort to re-take the farm (The Battle of the Cowshed) is analogous to the ] in which the western capitalist governments sent soldiers to try to remove the ] from power. | |||
*Napoleon's removal of Snowball is like ]’s removal of ] from power in 1927 and his subsequent expulsion and murder. | |||
*Squealer constantly changing the commandments on Napoleon's orders may refer to the constant line of adjustments to the Communist theory by the people in power. Also, his lies to animals of past events they cannot remember refers to the revision of history texts to glorify Stalin during his regime. | |||
*After Old Major dies, his skull is placed on display on a tree stump. Similarly, ]'s embalmed body was put on display in ] in ] post-mortem, where it still remains. It should also be noted that the tomb of ] is adorned by an extremely large bust of his likeness which lends more credibility to Old Major being a closer reference to ] than to ]. Marx's tomb is located in ], London. | |||
*When Napoleon steals Snowball’s idea for a windmill, the windmill can be considered a symbol of the Soviet ] a concept developed by Trotsky and adopted by Stalin, who, after banning Trotsky from the Soviet Union, claimed them to be his idea. The failure of the windmill to generate the expected creature comforts and subsequent search for saboteurs is probably a reference to accusations and a show trial against British engineers who were working on electrification projects in the ]. | |||
*Moses the raven leaving the farm for a while and then returning is similar to the Russian Orthodox Church going underground and then being brought back to give the workers (false) hope. | |||
*Boxer's motto, "Napoleon is always right" is strikingly similar to «Il Duce ha sempre ragione» ("Mussolini is always right"), a chant used to hail ] during his rule of ] from 1922 to 1943. | |||
*During the rise of Napoleon, he ordered the collection of all the hens' eggs. In an act of defiance, the hens destroyed their eggs rather than give them to Napoleon. During Stalin's ] period in the early 1930s, many Ukrainian peasants burned their crops and farms rather than handing them over to the government. | |||
*Napoleon's mass executions, of which many were unfair for the alleged crimes, is similar to ] executing his political enemies for various crimes after they were tortured and forced to falsify confessions. | |||
*The four pigs that defy Napoleon's will are comparable with the purged party members during the ] — Bukharin, Rykov, Zinoviev, Kamenev and many others. | |||
*Napoleon replaces the farm anthem "]" with an inane composition by the pig poet Minimus ("Animal Farm, Animal Farm / Never through me / Shall thou come to harm"). In 1943, Stalin replaced the old national anthem "]" with "the ]." The old Internationale glorified the revolution and "the people." The original version of the Hymn of the Soviet Union glorified Stalin so heavily that after his death in 1953, entire sections of the anthem had to be replaced or removed. Orwell could have also been referring to ] banning of the French national hymn, ] in 1799. | |||
*Napoleon works with Mr. Frederick, who eventually betrays Animal Farm and destroys the windmill. Though Animal Farm repels the human attack, many animals are wounded and killed. This is similar to Stalin’s ] with ] in 1939, which was later betrayed in 1941 when ]. Though the Soviet Union won the war, it came at a tremendous price of roughly 8.5-15 million Soviet soldiers (unconfirmed) and many civilians, resulting in an incredible estimated 20 million dead, as well as the utter destruction of the Western Soviet Union and its prized collective farms that Stalin had created in the 1930s. The detonation of the windmill and the battle that ensued there could also be a reference to the ]. The selling of the farm's excess timber supply could represent the offering of raw materials to the ] in exchange for weapons of war under the ]. | |||
*Napoleon changing Animal Farm back to Manor echoes the ]’s name change from the "Workers' and Peasants' Red Army" to the "Soviet Army" to appear as a more appealing and professional organization rather than an army of the common people. | |||
*Squealer may be an allegory of the Soviet Newspaper in which Stalin often wrote many of the articles anonymously to give the impression the country was far better off than it was. | |||
*The dogs may be an allegory to the NKVD (]), the elite police force who ruled by terror under Stalin's hand. | |||
*Boxer, in the allegory of the novel, directly relates to the working class who labored under strenuous and exceedingly difficult conditions throughout the Communist regime with the hope that their work would result in a more prosperous life. Boxer represents this clearly at points when he utters such quotes as "I will work harder" in response to any sort of difficulty. In the context of the story, this also allows Boxer to become a tool of propaganda to be used by Napoleon and his regime later on once Boxer has been murdered to pay for a crate of whiskey for the pigs. | |||
*When Napoleon and Snowball argue about how Animal Farm should be ruled, Napoleon favors acquiring weapons to defend the farm while Snowball favored getting other farms (countries) to rebel. This is similar to Stalin wanting "Socialism in one country" and Trotsky's theory of "Permanent Revolution." | |||
* The term "four legs good, two legs bad" could be symbolic for the simplification of the ], for workers to understand it better. | |||
*Napoleon once creates and awards himself with the Order of the Green Banner, a reference to the Soviet Union's ]. | |||
*The character of Boxer could be an allusion to the fiancial state of Russia at the time of publication. | |||
The original commandments are: | |||
{{endspoiler}} | |||
# Whatever goes upon two legs is an enemy. | |||
# Whatever goes upon four legs, or has wings, is a friend. | |||
# No animal shall wear clothes. | |||
# No animal shall sleep in a bed. | |||
# No animal shall drink alcohol. | |||
# No animal shall kill any other animal. | |||
# All animals are equal. | |||
These commandments are also distilled into the maxim "Four legs good, two legs bad!" which is primarily used by the sheep on the farm, often to disrupt discussions and disagreements between animals on the nature of Animalism. | |||
==British censorship and suppressed preface== | |||
During ] it became apparent to Orwell that anti-Russian literature was not something which most major publishing houses would touch — including his regular publisher ]. One publisher he sought to sell his book to rejected it on the grounds of government advice — although the assumed civil servant who gave the order was later found to be a ] ].<ref name = "Life"> {{cite book | |||
| last =Taylor | |||
| first =D.J. | |||
| authorlink = | |||
| coauthors = | |||
| year =2003 | |||
| title =Orwell: The Life | |||
| publisher = | |||
| location = | |||
| id =ISBN 0-8050-7473-2 | |||
}} p. 337 Writing to Leonard Moore, a partner in the literary agency of Christy & Moore, publisher "Jonathan Cape explained that the decision had been taken on the advice of a senior official in the Ministry of Information. Such flagrant anti-Soviet bias was unacceptable: and the choice of pigs as the dominant class was thought to be especially offensive. The `important official' was, or so it may reasonably be assumed, a man named ], later unmasked as a Soviet agent."</ref> | |||
Later, Napoleon and his pigs secretly revise some commandments to clear themselves of accusations of law-breaking. The changed commandments are as follows, with the changes bolded: | |||
Orwell originally prepared a preface which complains about British government suppression of his book, self-imposed British self-censorship and how the British people were suppressing criticism of the USSR, their World War II ally. "The sinister fact about literary ] in England is that it is largely voluntary. ... kept right out of the British press, not because the Government intervened but because of a general tacit agreement that ‘it wouldn’t do’ to mention that particular fact." Somewhat ], the preface itself was censored and is not published with most copies of the book.<ref name = "new"> {{cite journal | |||
{{ordered list|start=4 | |||
| first =George | |||
| No animal shall sleep in a bed '''with sheets'''. | |||
| last =Orwell | |||
| No animal shall drink alcohol '''to excess'''. | |||
| authorlink = | |||
| No animal shall kill any other animal '''without cause'''. | |||
| coauthors = | |||
| All animals are equal '''but some animals are more equal than others.''' | |||
| year =1995 | |||
}} | |||
| month =August 26 | |||
| title =Triumph of the Herd Instinct; Animal Farm, the savage satire against Stalin, became a worldwide best-seller but publication was delayed by sensitivity to Britain's Russian ally | |||
| journal =The Guardian | |||
| volume = | |||
| issue = | |||
| pages = 28 | |||
| id = | |||
| url =http://bailey83221.livejournal.com/83481.html | |||
}}</ref><ref name = "new2"> {{cite journal | |||
| first =George | |||
| last =Orwell | |||
| authorlink = | |||
| coauthors = | |||
| year =1995 | |||
| month =August 18 | |||
| title =The freedom of the press, rediscovered preface to 'Animal Farm' | |||
| journal =New Statesman & Society | |||
| volume =8 | |||
| issue =366 | |||
| pages =11 | |||
| id =ISSN 0954-2361 | |||
| url =http://bailey83221.livejournal.com/83481.html | |||
}}</ref><ref name = "freedom"> {{cite web | |||
| title =George Orwell: The Freedom of the Press | |||
| work =Archive.org | |||
| url =http://web.archive.org/web/20050306021634/http://orwell.ru/library/novels/Animal_Farm/english/efp_go | |||
| accessdate=May 12, 2006 | |||
}}</ref> | |||
Eventually, these are replaced with the maxims, "All animals are equal, but some animals are more equal than others", and "Four legs good, two legs better" as the pigs become more ]. This is an ] twist to the original purpose of the Seven Commandments, which was supposed to keep order within Animal Farm by uniting the animals together against the humans and preventing animals from following the humans' evil habits. Through the revision of the commandments, Orwell demonstrates how simply political ] can be turned into malleable ].{{sfn|Carr|2010|pp=78–79}} | |||
==Cultural references== | |||
{{main|Animal Farm in popular culture}} | |||
===Significance and allegory=== | |||
References to the novella are frequent in other works of popular culture, particularly in popular music and television series. | |||
], the Communist symbol. By the end of the book when Napoleon takes full control, the Hoof and Horn is removed from the flag.]] | |||
Orwell biographer Jeffrey Meyers has written, "virtually every detail has political significance in this allegory".{{sfn|Meyers|1975|p=249}} Orwell himself wrote in 1946, "Of course I intended it primarily as a satire on the Russian revolution ... ''that kind'' of revolution (violent conspiratorial revolution, led by unconsciously power-hungry people) can only lead to a change of masters revolutions only effect a radical improvement when the masses are alert".{{sfn|Orwell|2013|page=334}} In a preface for a 1947 Ukrainian edition, he stated, "for the past ten years I have been convinced that the destruction of the Soviet myth was essential if we wanted a revival of the socialist movement. On my return from Spain I thought of exposing the Soviet myth in a story that could be easily understood by almost anyone and which could be easily translated into other languages".{{sfn|Crick |2019 |p=450}} | |||
The revolt of the animals against Farmer Jones is Orwell's analogy with the ]. The ''Battle of the Cowshed'' has been said to represent the ] of ] in 1918,{{sfn| Davison| 1996|p= 161}} and the defeat of the ] in the ].{{sfn| Firchow |2008 |p=102}} The pigs' rise to preeminence mirrors the rise of a Stalinist bureaucracy in the USSR, just as Napoleon's emergence as the farm's sole leader reflects Stalin's emergence.<ref name=":0">{{Cite web|url=https://fod.infobase.com/p_ViewVideo.aspx?xtid=129225|title=Animal Farm|date=2014|website=Films on Demand}}</ref> The pigs' appropriation of milk and apples for their own use, "the turning point of the story" as Orwell termed it in a letter to ],{{sfn|Orwell|2013|page=334}} stands as an analogy for the crushing of the left-wing 1921 ] against the Bolsheviks, {{sfn|Orwell|2013|page=334}} and the difficult efforts of the animals to build the windmill suggest the various ]. The puppies controlled by Napoleon parallel the nurture of the secret police in the Stalinist structure, and the pigs' treatment of the other animals on the farm recalls the internal terror faced by the populace in the 1930s.{{sfn| Leab| 2007 |pp=6–7}} In chapter seven, when the animals confess their non-existent crimes and are killed, Orwell directly alludes to the purges, confessions and ] of the late 1930s. These contributed to Orwell's conviction that the Bolshevik revolution had been corrupted and the Soviet system become rotten.{{sfn|Dickstein |2007|p= 135 }} | |||
] and ] contend that the ''Battle of the Windmill'', specifically referencing the ] and the ], represents ].{{sfn|Firchow|2008|p=102}}{{sfn| Davison |1996|p= 161}} During the battle, Orwell first wrote, "All the animals, including Napoleon" took cover. Orwell had the publisher alter this to "All the animals except Napoleon" in recognition of Stalin's decision to remain in Moscow during the German advance.{{sfn|Meyers| 1975 |p=142}} Orwell requested the change after he met ] in Paris in March 1945. Czapski, a survivor of the ] and an opponent of the Soviet regime, told Orwell, as Orwell wrote to ], that it had been "the character greatness of Stalin" that saved Russia from the German invasion.{{efn|A Note on the Text, Peter Davison, ''Animal Farm'', Penguin edition 1989 |p=xx}} | |||
], ], and ] – 'When Snowball comes to the crucial points in his speeches he is drowned out by the sheep (Ch. V), just as in the ] , at Stalin's instigation 'pleas for the opposition were drowned in the continual, hysterically intolerant uproar from the floor'. (]{{sfn|Meyers| 1975|pp= 138, 311}})]] | |||
Other connections that writers have suggested illustrate Orwell's telescoping of Russian history from 1917 to 1943,{{sfn|Meyers |1975|p= 135}}{{efn| In the Preface to ''Animal Farm'' Orwell noted, however, "although various episodes are taken from the actual history of the Russian Revolution, they are dealt with schematically and their chronological order is changed."}} including the wave of rebelliousness that ran through the countryside after the Rebellion, which stands for the abortive revolutions ] and ] (Ch. IV); the conflict between Napoleon and Snowball (Ch. V), parallelling "the two rival and quasi-Messianic beliefs that seemed pitted against one another: ], with its faith in the ] of the proletariat of the West; and Stalinism with its glorification of ]";{{sfn|Meyers |1975|p=138}} Napoleon's dealings with Whymper and the Willingdon markets (Ch. VI), paralleling the ]; and Frederick's forged bank notes, parallelling the ] of August 1939, after which Frederick attacks Animal Farm without warning and destroys the windmill.{{sfn|Meyers|1975 |p=141}} | |||
The book's close, with the pigs and men in a kind of ], reflected Orwell's view of the 1943 ]{{efn|Preface to the Ukrainian edition of ''Animal Farm'', reprinted in Orwell:Collected Works, ''It Is What I Think'' |p= 89}} that seemed to display the establishment of "the best possible relations between the USSR and the West" – but in reality were destined, as Orwell presciently predicted, to continue to unravel.{{sfn|Leab |2007|p= 7 }} The disagreement between the allies and the start of the ] is suggested when Napoleon and Pilkington, both suspicious, each "played an ace of spades simultaneously".{{sfn|Meyers|1975 |p=142}} | |||
Similarly, the music in the novel, starting with "Beasts of England" and the later anthems, parallels "]" and its adoption and repudiation by the Soviet authorities as the anthem of the USSR in the 1920s and 1930s.<ref>{{Cite book |last=Fay |first=Laurel E. |url=http://archive.org/details/shostakovichlife0000fayl |title=Shostakovich : a life |date=2000 |publisher=New York : Oxford University Press |others=Internet Archive |isbn=978-0-19-513438-4}}</ref> | |||
According to ], the metamorphosis of the eighth commandment ("some animals are more equal") was likely inspired by similar change of a party line which declared all Soviet people equal: the Russian nation and language suddenly became "first among equals" in official CPSU publications in 1936–1937.<ref>{{Cite book |last=Gessen |first=Masha |title=The Future is History |year=2018 |isbn=9781594634543 |pages=77–78|publisher=Penguin }}</ref> | |||
==Adaptations== | ==Adaptations== | ||
===Stage productions=== | |||
] | |||
] | |||
] | |||
A theatrical version, with music by ] and lyrics by ], was staged at the ] London on 25 April 1984, directed by ]. It toured nine cities in 1985.{{sfn|Orwell|2013|page=341}} | |||
* ''']''' — The book was the basis of an animated feature ] in 1954 (Britain's first full-length animated movie), directed by ] and ] and quietly commissioned by the American ].<ref></ref> This version softened the theme of the story slightly by reducing the role of Moses, the character representing religion. It also added an epilogue where the other animals successfully revolt against the pigs immediately after the novel's iconic concluding imagery is depicted. | |||
A solo version, adapted and performed by ], premiered at the ] Edinburgh in January 1995 and has toured worldwide since.{{sfn|One man ''Animal''|2013}}{{sfn|''Animal Farm''}} | |||
* ''']''' — A live action film directed by John Stephenson, with voices by ] as Snowball, ] as Napoleon, and ] as Squealer. Despite a few differences (such as completely different songs), the plot generally resembles that of the book, although once again the role of Moses is somewhat softened (] is never mentioned). The film diverges from the book with an additional epilogue in which Jesse the dog and several animals escape and return years later to a post-Napoleon era Animal Farm. This is an update which could be seen as an analogy to the fall of the Soviet Union. In the film, Jesse, one of the female dogs, is now the main character, protagonist, and narrator. | |||
In 2021, during pandemic restrictions, the ] toured a stage version of ''Animal Farm;'' this run included outdoor performances on a farm at ].<ref>{{Cite web|last=Bentley|first=Charlotte|title=National Youth Theatre heads to Shropshire stage 'sanctuary' for Animal Farm|url=https://www.shropshirestar.com/entertainment/theatre-and-comedy/2021/06/17/national-youth-theatre-brings-animal-farm-to-shropshire-countryside/|access-date=23 June 2021|website=shropshirestar.com|date=17 June 2021}}</ref> | |||
==Editions== | |||
* ISBN 0-582-02173-1 (], ]) | |||
* ISBN 0-15-107255-8 (], ]) | |||
* ISBN 0-582-06010-9 (paper text, 1991) | |||
* ISBN 0-679-42039-8 (hardcover, 1993) | |||
* ISBN 0-606-00102-6 (], ]) | |||
* ISBN 0-15-100217-7 (hardcover, 1996, Anniversary Edition) | |||
* ISBN 0-452-27750-7 (], 1996, Anniversary Edition) | |||
* ISBN 0-451-52634-1 (], 1996, Anniversary Edition) | |||
* ISBN 0-582-53008-3 (1996) | |||
* ISBN 1-56000-520-3 (], ], Large Type Edition) | |||
* ISBN 0-7910-4774-1 (hardcover, 1999) | |||
* ISBN 0-451-52536-1 (paperback, 1999) | |||
* ISBN 0-7641-0819-0 (paperback, 1999) | |||
* ISBN 0-8220-7009-X (], 1999) | |||
* ISBN 0-7587-7843-0 (hardcover, 2002) | |||
* ISBN 0-15-101026-9 (hardcover, 2003, with '']'') | |||
* ISBN 0-452-28424-4 (paperback, 2003, Centennial Edition) | |||
* ISBN 0-8488-0120-2 (hardcover) | |||
* ISBN 0-03-055434-9 (hardcover) Animal Farm with Connections | |||
* ISBN 0-395-79677-6 (hardcover) Animal Farm & Related Readings, 1997 | |||
A new adaptation written and directed by ], designed by ] with puppetry designed and directed by Toby Olié opened at the ] in January 2022 before touring the UK.<ref>{{Cite web|title=Animal Farm stage adaptation cast, tour dates and more revealed {{!}} WhatsOnStage|url=https://www.whatsonstage.com/birmingham-theatre/news/animal-farm-stage-adaptation-cast-tour-dates_54874.html|access-date=2022-01-29|website=whatsonstage.com|date=10 September 2021}}</ref> | |||
== References == | |||
<!--This article uses the Cite.php citation mechanism. If you would like more information on how to add references to this article, please see http://meta.wikimedia.org/Cite/Cite.php --> | |||
<div class="references-small"><references/></div> | |||
The Russian composer ] has written an ] based on the book. Its premiere took place on 4 March 2023 in Amsterdam as part of ]'s 2022/2023 season.<ref>{{Cite web |date=2022-03-29 |title=Dutch National Opera, Wiener Staatsoper & Teatro Massimo to Collaborate on ''Animal Farm''|url=https://operawire.com/dutch-national-opera-wiener-staatsoper-teatro-massimo-to-collaborate-on-animal-farm/ |access-date=2022-12-08 |website=OperaWire}}</ref> | |||
== External links == | |||
{{wikiquote}} | |||
* {{Gutenberg Australia|no =ebooks01/0100011|name = Animal Farm|html = yes}} | |||
* (author biography included) | |||
* Summary and Analysis | |||
* | |||
===Films=== | |||
''Animal Farm'' has been adapted to film twice. Both differ from the novel and have been accused of taking significant liberties, including sanitising some aspects.{{citation needed|date=February 2023}} | |||
* ] (1954) is an animated film, in which Napoleon is eventually overthrown in a second revolution. In 1974, ] revealed that he had been sent by the ]'s ] department to obtain the film rights from Orwell's widow, and the resulting 1954 animation was funded by the agency.{{sfn|Chilton|2016}}<ref>{{Cite journal |last=Senn |first=Samantha |date=2015-10-01 |title=All Propaganda is Dangerous, but Some are More Dangerous than Others: George Orwell and the Use of Literature as Propaganda |url=https://digitalcommons.usf.edu/jss/vol8/iss5/14 |journal=Journal of Strategic Security |volume=8 |issue=5 |pages=149–161 |doi=10.5038/1944-0472.8.3S.1483 |s2cid=145306291 |issn=1944-0464|doi-access=free }}</ref> | |||
* ] (1999) is a live-action TV version that shows Napoleon's regime collapsing in on itself, with the farm having new human owners, reflecting the collapse of Soviet communism.<ref>{{Cite web |title=Animal Farm (1954, 1999) |url=https://lozierinstitute.org/movie-reviews/animal-farm-1954-1999/ |access-date=2024-06-22 |website=Lozier Institute}}</ref> | |||
] is directing an ].<ref>{{cite web|url=https://www.hollywoodreporter.com/movies/movie-news/animal-farm-andy-serkis-cinesite-imaginarium-1235132208/|work=The Hollywood Reporter|title=Andy Serkis Teams With Cinesite on 'Animal Farm' Adaptation|author=Giardina, Carolyn|date=19 April 2022|access-date=19 January 2023}}</ref> | |||
{{Animal Farm}} | |||
===Radio dramatisations=== | |||
] | |||
A BBC radio version, produced by ], was broadcast in January 1947. Orwell listened to the production at his home in Canonbury Square, London, with ], amongst others. Orwell later wrote to Heppenstall that Porteous, "who had not read the book, grasped what was happening after a few minutes".{{sfn|Orwell|2013|page=112}} | |||
] | |||
] | |||
] | |||
] | |||
] | |||
] | |||
] | |||
] | |||
A further radio production, again using Orwell's dramatisation of the book, was broadcast in January 2013 on ]. ] narrated, and the cast included ] as Napoleon, ] as the propagandist Squealer, and ] as Boxer.{{sfn|Real George Orwell}} | |||
] | |||
] | |||
===Comic strip=== | |||
] | |||
] copy of the first instalment of Pett and Freeman's ''Animal Farm'' comic strip]] | |||
] | |||
] | |||
In 1950, ] and his writing partner ] were secretly hired by the ], a secret department of the ], to adapt ''Animal Farm'' into a comic strip. This comic was not published in the United Kingdom but ran in Brazilian and Burmese newspapers.{{sfn|Norman Pett}} | |||
] | |||
] | |||
===Video game=== | |||
] | |||
] | |||
Developers Nerial and The Dairymen released a game based on the book in December 2020, entitled ''Orwell's Animal Farm'', for ], ], ] and ] in coordination with the Orwell Estate. | |||
] | |||
] | |||
==See also== | |||
] | |||
* ] | |||
] | |||
* ] | |||
] | |||
* ] | |||
] | |||
* ] | |||
] | |||
* ] | |||
] | |||
* ] | |||
] | |||
* ] | |||
] | |||
* '']'', an album based on ''Animal Farm'' | |||
] | |||
] | |||
===Books=== | |||
] | |||
* '']'' was a favourite book of Orwell's. ] reverses the role of horses and human beings in the fourth book. Orwell brought to ''Animal Farm'' "a dose of Swiftian misanthropy, looking ahead to a time 'when the human race had finally been overthrown."{{sfn|Dickstein|2007 |p= 135}} | |||
] | |||
* '']'' (''Revolt''), published in 1924, is a book by Polish ] ] with a theme similar to ''Animal Farm''. | |||
] | |||
* '']'', published in 1856 and written by William M. Burwell, is a satirical novel that features allegories for ]<ref>{{cite web |title= Burwell's White Acre vs. Black Acre |url= http://utc.iath.virginia.edu/proslav/burwellhp.html |website=Uncle Tom's Cabin & American Culture |access-date= 18 October 2020}}</ref> similar to ''Animal Farm''{{'}}s portrayal of Soviet history. | |||
] | |||
* George Orwell's own '']'' is a ] about ]. | |||
] | |||
] | |||
==References== | |||
] | |||
] | |||
=== Explanatory notes === | |||
{{notelist | 30em}} | |||
===Citations=== | |||
{{Reflist}} | |||
=== General sources === | |||
{{Refbegin|30em}} | |||
<!-- In alphabetical order by last name or organisation name. --> | |||
* {{cite news |title=12 Things You May Not Know About Animal Farm |date=17 August 2015 |url= https://metro.co.uk/2015/08/17/12-things-you-may-not-know-about-animal-farm-for-17th-5317058/ |newspaper=Metro |access-date=16 August 2018|ref=CITEREF12 Things You2015}} | |||
* {{Cite web|url= http://www.thehugoawards.org/hugo-history/1946-retro-hugo-awards/|title=1946 Retro-Hugo Awards|date=1996|website=The Hugo Awards|access-date=23 February 2019|ref={{harvid|The Hugo Awards|1996}}}} | |||
* {{cite web |title=''Animal Farm'': Sixty Years On |url= http://www.historytoday.com/robert-pearce/animal-farm-sixty-years |website=] |url-status=live |archive-url= https://web.archive.org/web/20171108041135/http://www.historytoday.com/robert-pearce/animal-farm-sixty-years |archive-date=8 November 2017 |ref= CITEREF''Animal Farm'': Sixty}} | |||
* {{cite web |title=Animal Farm |website= Theatre Tours International |url=http://www.theatretoursinternational.com/PastShows/PSDomestic/PSAFgm.html |access-date=2 February 2013 |url-status=dead |archive-url= https://web.archive.org/web/20090630061940/http://www.theatretoursinternational.com/PastShows/PSDomestic/PSAFgm.html |archive-date=30 June 2009 |ref= CITEREFAnimal Farm}} | |||
* {{cite book |last=Bloom |first= Harold |title=Bloom's Modern Critical Interpretations: Animal Farm |year=2009 |author-link=Harold Bloom |edition= new |url= https://books.google.com/books?id=V7C4bXGsrc8C&q=Mr+Frederick+allegory+hitler&pg=PA70 |access-date=13 May 2013 |publisher=Infobase Publishing |isbn= 978-1-60413582-4 |url-status=live |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20161122174908/https://books.google.com/books?id=V7C4bXGsrc8C&pg=PA70#v=onepage&q=Mr%20Frederick%20allegory%20hitler |archive-date=22 November 2016 }} | |||
* {{cite news |title=Books of the day – Animal Farm |date=24 August 1945 |url= https://www.theguardian.com/books/1945/aug/24/georgeorwell.classics |work=The Guardian |access-date=17 July 2016 |url-status=live |archive-url= https://web.archive.org/web/20160730154211/https://www.theguardian.com/books/1945/aug/24/georgeorwell.classics |archive-date=30 July 2016 |ref= CITEREFBooks of day1945}} | |||
* {{cite book|last=Bowker|first= Gordon|title=George Orwell|url= https://books.google.com/books?id=brRjuvvrbzgC|year=2013|publisher=Little, Brown Book Group|isbn= 978-1-4055-2805-4}} | |||
* {{cite book |last=Bynum |first= Helen |title=Spitting Blood: The History of Tuberculosis |year=2012 |publisher=Oxford University Press |isbn=978-0-19954205-5 |url= https://books.google.com/books?id=cVih-ivuiiwC&pg=PR13 |page= xiii}} | |||
* {{cite book |last=Carr |first= Craig L. |title=Orwell, Politics, and Power |year= 2010 |publisher= Continuum International Publishing Group |isbn= 978-1-4411-5854-3 |url= https://books.google.com/books?id=V1GCAqNSlYwC&pg=PA78 |access-date=9 June 2012}} | |||
* {{cite news |first=Martin |last= Chilton |title=How the CIA brought Animal Farm to the screen |date=21 January 2016 |url= https://www.telegraph.co.uk/books/authors/how-cia-brought-animal-farm-to-the-screen/ |newspaper=The Telegraph |access-date=27 October 2016 |url-status=live |archive-url= https://web.archive.org/web/20161026174651/http://www.telegraph.co.uk/books/authors/how-cia-brought-animal-farm-to-the-screen/ |archive-date=26 October 2016}} | |||
* {{cite book|last=Crick|first= Bernard |title=George Orwell: A Life |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=1OVPvAEACAAJ|date=2019|publisher= Sutherland House Publishing|isbn= 978-1-9994395-0-7}} | |||
* {{cite book|last=Davison|first=P.|title=George Orwell: A Literary Life |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=FkmEDAAAQBAJ|year=1996|publisher= Palgrave Macmillan UK|isbn= 978-0-230-37140-8}} | |||
* {{cite web |last=Davison |first= Peter |title=George Orwell: Animal Farm: A Fairy Story: A Note on the Text |year=2000 |publisher= ] |location=England |url= http://www.orwell.ru/library/novels/Animal_Farm/english/eint_pd |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20061212041856/http://www.orwell.ru/library/novels/Animal_Farm/english/eint_pd |archive-date= 12 December 2006 }} | |||
* {{cite book|last=Dickstein|first= Morris|chapter=Animal Farm: History as fable|pages=133–45|title=The Cambridge Companion to George Orwell |editor-first =John | editor-last = Rodden |url= https://books.google.com/books?id=x8-fnamQuUkC|date= 2007|publisher= Cambridge University Press |isbn= 978-0-521-67507-9}} | |||
* {{cite news |last=Eliot |first= Valery |title=T.S. Eliot and Animal Farm: Reasons for Rejection |date=6 January 1969 |url= http://archive.timesonline.co.uk/tol/viewArticle.arc?articleId=ARCHIVE-The_Times-1969-01-06-09-004&pageId=ARCHIVE-The_Times-1969-01-06-09 |work=] |location=UK |access-date=8 April 2009 |url-status= dead |archive-url= https://web.archive.org/web/20091015180725/http://archive.timesonline.co.uk/tol/viewArticle.arc?articleId=ARCHIVE-The_Times-1969-01-06-09-004&pageId=ARCHIVE-The_Times-1969-01-06-09 |archive-date= 15 October 2009 }} | |||
* {{cite web |title=The Fall of Mister Jones and the Russian Revolution of 1917 |url= http://www.shmoop.com/animal-farm/fall-mister-jones-russian-revolution-1917-symbol.html |publisher=Shmoop University |access-date=13 May 2013 |url-status=live |archive-url= https://web.archive.org/web/20131202221910/http://www.shmoop.com/animal-farm/fall-mister-jones-russian-revolution-1917-symbol.html |archive-date=2 December 2013 |ref= CITEREFFall of Mister}} | |||
* {{cite book|last=Firchow|first= Peter Edgerly|title=Modern Utopian Fictions from H.G. Wells to Iris Murdoch|url= https://books.google.com/books?id=kzT3bY2a0hsC|year=2008|publisher=CUA Press|isbn= 978-0-8132-1573-0}} | |||
* {{cite web |title=GCSE English Literature – ''Animal Farm'' – historical context (pt 1/3) |url= https://www.bbc.co.uk/learningzone/clips/george-orwells-animal-farm-historical-context-pt-1-3/8177.html |publisher=] |url-status=live |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20120103211528/http://www.bbc.co.uk/learningzone/clips/george-orwells-animal-farm-historical-context-pt-1-3/8177.html |archive-date= 3 January 2012 |ref= CITEREFGcse_English_Literature}} | |||
* {{cite news |last=Giardina |first= Carolyn |title=Andy Serkis to Direct Adaptation of 'Animal Farm' |date=19 October 2012 |work= The Hollywood Reporter |url= http://www.hollywoodreporter.com/news/andy-serkis-animal-farm-381314 |access-date=26 August 2013 |url-status=live |archive-url= https://web.archive.org/web/20131113074010/http://www.hollywoodreporter.com/news/andy-serkis-animal-farm-381314 |archive-date=13 November 2013}} | |||
* {{cite book|last=Fyvel|first=Tosco R.|title=George Orwell, a personal memoir|url=https://archive.org/details/georgeorwellpers0000fyve |url-access=registration|date=1982|publisher=MacMillan|isbn= 978-0-02542040-3}} | |||
* {{cite magazine |last1=Grossman |first1=Lev |last2=Lacayo |first2= Richard |title=All-Time 100 Novels |date=16 October 2005 |author-link1= Lev Grossman |author-link2=Richard Lacayo |magazine=] |url= http://www.time.com/time/2005/100books/the_complete_list.html |access-date=31 August 2008 |archive-url= https://web.archive.org/web/20080913100321/http://www.time.com/time/2005/100books/the_complete_list.html |archive-date=13 September 2008 |url-status=dead }} | |||
* {{cite book|last=Hitchens|first= Christopher|title=Why Orwell Matters |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=Yvc4DgAAQBAJ|date=2008 |publisher= Basic Books|isbn= 978-0-7867-2589-2}} | |||
* {{cite book|last=Leab|first=Daniel J.|title=Orwell Subverted: The CIA and the Filming of Animal Farm|url= https://books.google.com/books?id=VRpFAvD7vAsC|year=2007|publisher=Penn State Press|isbn= 978-0-271-02978-8}} | |||
* {{cite web |last=Meija |first=Jay |title=Animal Farm: A Beast Fable for Our Beastly Times |date=26 August 2002 |url= https://www.litkicks.com/AnimalFarm |work=] |access-date=16 February 2019}} | |||
* {{cite book|last=Meyers|first= Jeffrey|title=A Reader's Guide to George Orwell|url= https://archive.org/details/readersguidetoge0000meye_f5a7|url-access=registration|year=1975 |publisher=Thames and Hudson|isbn= 978-0-500-15016-0}} | |||
* {{cite web |title=Norman Pett |url= https://www.lambiek.net/artists/p/pett_norman.htm |website= lambiek.net |access-date=8 May 2018 |url-status=live |archive-url= https://web.archive.org/web/20171217014058/https://www.lambiek.net/artists/p/pett_norman.htm |archive-date=17 December 2017 |ref= CITEREFNorman Pett}} | |||
* {{cite news |title=One man ''Animal Farm'' Show On the Way to Darwen |date=25 January 2013 |work= Lancashire Telegraph |url= http://www.lancashiretelegraph.co.uk/leisure/whats_on/10187002.One_man_Animal_Farm_show_on_the_way_to_Darwen/ |url-status=live |archive-url= https://web.archive.org/web/20140106181013/http://www.lancashiretelegraph.co.uk/leisure/whats_on/10187002.One_man_Animal_Farm_show_on_the_way_to_Darwen/ |archive-date=6 January 2014 |ref= CITEREFOne man Animal2013}} | |||
* {{cite web |last=Orwell |first=George |title=The Freedom of the Press: Orwell's Proposed Preface to 'Animal Farm' |url= http://www.orwell.ru/library/novels/Animal_Farm/english/efp_go |access-date=22 February 2019 |url-status=live |archive-url= https://web.archive.org/web/20130116052227/http://orwell.ru/library/novels/Animal_Farm/english/efp_go |archive-date=16 January 2013 |year=1945 |ref= CITEREFFreedom_of_the_Press }} | |||
* {{cite book |last=Orwell |first= George |title=Animal Farm |url= https://archive.org/details/animalfarmfairys00orwe |url-access= registration |year=1946 |author-link=George Orwell |publisher= The New American Library |location=New York |isbn= 978-1-4193-6524-9}} | |||
* {{cite web |last=Orwell |first= George |title=Preface to the Ukrainian Edition of Animal Farm |date=March 1947 |author-link=George Orwell |url= http://www.netcharles.com/orwell/essays/ukrainian-af-pref.htm |url-status=dead |archive-url= https://web.archive.org/web/20051024074027/http://www.netcharles.com/orwell/essays/ukrainian-af-pref.htm |archive-date=24 October 2005}} | |||
* {{cite book |last=Orwell |first= George |title=Animal Farm |year=1979 |author-link=George Orwell |orig-year=First published by Martin Secker & Warburg 1945; published in Penguin Books 1951 |publisher= ] |location=England |isbn= 978-0-14-000838-8 }} | |||
* {{cite book|last=Orwell|first= George|title=Smothered Under Journalism 1946|url= https://books.google.com/books?id=JEmANgAACAAJ |year=2001|publisher=Secker & Warburg|isbn= 978-0-436-20556-9}} | |||
* {{cite book|last=Orwell|first= George |editor=Peter Hobley Davison|title=The Lost Orwell: Being a Supplement to The Complete Works of George Orwell |url= https://books.google.com/books?id=YeGTkQEACAAJ|year=2006|publisher=Timewell |isbn=978-1-85725-214-9 }} | |||
* {{cite book|last=Orwell|first= George|title=Animal Farm: A Fairy Story |url= https://books.google.com/books?id=nkalO3OsoeMC|date=2009 |publisher= HMH Books |isbn= 978-0-547-37022-4}} | |||
* {{cite book|last=Orwell|first= George|title=George Orwell: A Life in Letters|editor=Peter Davison |url= https://books.google.com/books?id=_WE4AAAAQBAJ&pg=PA231|year= 2013|publisher=W. W. Norton & Co |isbn= 978-0-87140-462-6|page=231}} | |||
* {{cite web |title=The Real George Orwell, Animal Farm |url= https://www.bbc.co.uk/programmes/b01q7fzf |publisher=BBC Radio 4 |url-status=live |archive-url= https://web.archive.org/web/20130127033407/http://www.bbc.co.uk/programmes/b01q7fzf |archive-date= 27 January 2013 |ref= {{sfnref|Real George Orwell}}}} | |||
* {{cite book|last=Orwell|first=George|title=Why I Write|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=teKmBAAAQBAJ|date=2014|publisher=Penguin Books Limited|isbn=978-0-14-198060-7}} | |||
* {{cite book|last=Orwell|first=George|title=I Belong to the Left: 1945|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=KCwvrgEACAAJ|year=2015|publisher=Penguin Random House|isbn=978-1-84655-944-0}} | |||
* {{cite book|last=Overy|first=Richard|title=Why the Allies Won|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=aA-lS2K4hJkC|year=1997|publisher=W.W. Norton|isbn=978-0-393-31619-3}} | |||
* {{cite book |last=Rodden |first=John |title=Understanding Animal Farm: A Student Casebook to Issues, Sources, and Historical Documents |year=1999 |publisher=Greenwood Publishing Group |isbn=978-0-313-30201-5 |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=TG-YpkczTjEC&pg=PA40 |access-date=9 June 2012}} | |||
* {{cite journal |last1=Roper |first1=D. |title=Viewpoint 2: The Boxer Mentality |year=1977 |pages=11–63 |jstor=40176954 |volume=9 |issue=11 |journal=Change |doi=10.1080/00091383.1977.10569271 | issn=0009-1383 }} | |||
* {{cite web |title=The Scheming Frederick and how Hitler Broke the Non-Aggression Pact |url=http://www.shmoop.com/animal-farm/scheming-frederick-how-hitler-broke-non-aggression-pact-symbol.html |publisher=Shmoop University |access-date=13 May 2013 |url-status=live |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20131202221757/http://www.shmoop.com/animal-farm/scheming-frederick-how-hitler-broke-non-aggression-pact-symbol.html |archive-date=2 December 2013 |ref=CITEREFScheming Frederick how}} | |||
* {{cite magazine |first=George |last=Soule |title=1946 Review of George Orwell's 'Animal Farm' |url=https://newrepublic.com/article/114852/1946-review-george-orwells-animal-farm |magazine=The New Republic|year=1946 |url-status=live |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20170114001741/https://newrepublic.com/article/114852/1946-review-george-orwells-animal-farm |archive-date=14 January 2017 }} | |||
* {{cite web |title=SparkNotes 'Literature Study Guides' "Animal Farm" Chapter VIII |url=http://www.sparknotes.com/lit/animalfarm/section8.rhtml |publisher=SparkNotes LLC |access-date=13 May 2013 |url-status=live |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20130518124512/http://www.sparknotes.com/lit/animalfarm/section8.rhtml |archive-date=18 May 2013 |ref=CITEREFSparknotes " Literature}} | |||
* {{cite journal |last1=Sutherland |first1=T. |title=Speaking My Mind: Orwell Farmed for Education |year= 2005 |pages=17–19 |jstor= 30047391 |volume=95 |issue=1 |journal=The English Journal|doi= 10.2307/30047391 }} | |||
* {{cite book |last=Taylor |first= David John |title=Orwell: The Life |year=2003 |author-link=D. J. Taylor (writer) |publisher=H. Holt |isbn= 978-0-8050-7473-4 |url-access= registration |url= https://archive.org/details/orwelllife00tayl }} | |||
* {{cite news |title=The whitewashing of Stalin |date=11 November 2008 |publisher=BBC News |url= http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/uk_news/magazine/7719633.stm |url-status= live |archive-url= https://web.archive.org/web/20081112021024/http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/uk_news/magazine/7719633.stm |archive-date=12 November 2008 |ref=CITEREFWhitewashing of Stalin2008}} | |||
* {{Cite web|url= http://www.modernlibrary.com/top-100/100-best-novels/|title=Top 100 Best Novels|date=1998|website=Modern Library |access-date=23 February 2019 |ref={{harvid|Modern Library|1998}}}} | |||
{{Refend}} | |||
==Further reading== | |||
* {{cite book |last=Bott |first=George |title=Selected Writings |year=1968 |orig-year=1958 |publisher=Heinemann Educational Books |location=London, Melbourne, Toronto, Singapore, Johannesburg, Hong Kong, Nairobi, Auckland, Ibadan |isbn=978-0-435-13675-8}} | |||
* {{cite book |last=Menchhofer |first= Robert W. |title=Animal Farm |year=1990 |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=GhvjsczkdBIC&pg=PA1 |publisher=Lorenz Educational Press |isbn= 978-0787780616 }} | |||
* O'Neill, Terry, '''' (1998), Greenhaven Press. {{ISBN|1565106512}}. | |||
==External links== | |||
{{sister project links|d=Q1396889|c=category:Animal Farm|n=no|b=no|v=no|voy=no|m=no|mw=no|wikt=no|s=no|species=no|display=''Animal Farm''}} | |||
* {{FadedPage|id=201410E7|name=Animal Farm}} | |||
* {{Gutenberg Australia |id=plusfifty-n-z.html#orwell |name=Animal Farm}} | |||
* {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20100107005746/http://literapedia.wikispaces.com/Animal+Farm |date=7 January 2010 }} | |||
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* {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20091230181828/http://home.iprimus.com.au/korob/Orwell.html |date=30 December 2009 }} | |||
* by ], ''International Socialism'', 44 (1989) | |||
* at the British Library | |||
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Latest revision as of 19:49, 6 January 2025
1945 novella by George Orwell This article is about the novel by George Orwell. For other uses, see Animal Farm (disambiguation).
First edition cover | |
Author | George Orwell |
---|---|
Original title | Animal Farm: A Fairy Story |
Language | English |
Genre | Political satire |
Published | 17 August 1945 (Secker and Warburg, London, England) |
Publication place | United Kingdom |
Media type | Print (hard & paperback) |
Pages | 92 |
Awards | Modern Library's 100 Best Novels
NPR: 100 Best Science Fiction and Fantasy Books Hugo Award for Best Short Novel (1946) Prometheus Award – Hall of Fame (2011) |
OCLC | 3655473 |
Dewey Decimal | 823/.912 20 |
LC Class | PZ3.O793 An |
Preceded by | Inside the Whale and Other Essays |
Followed by | Nineteen Eighty-Four |
Animal Farm is a satirical allegorical novella, in the form of a beast fable, by George Orwell, first published in England on 17 August 1945. It tells the story of a group of anthropomorphic farm animals who rebel against their human farmer, hoping to create a society where the animals can be equal, free, and happy. Ultimately, the rebellion is betrayed, and under the dictatorship of a pig named Napoleon, the farm ends up in a state far worse than before.
According to Orwell, Animal Farm reflects events leading up to the Russian Revolution of 1917 and then on into the Stalinist era of the Soviet Union, a period when Russia lived under the Marxist–Leninist ideology of Joseph Stalin. Orwell, a democratic socialist, was a critic of Stalin and hostile to Moscow-directed Stalinism, an attitude that was critically shaped by his experiences during the Barcelona May Days conflicts between the POUM and Stalinist forces, during the Spanish Civil War. In a letter to Yvonne Davet, Orwell described Animal Farm as a satirical tale against Stalin ("un conte satirique contre Staline"), and in his essay, "Why I Write" (1946), wrote: "Animal Farm was the first book in which I tried, with full consciousness of what I was doing, to fuse political purpose and artistic purpose into one whole".
The original title of the novel was Animal Farm: A Fairy Story. American publishers dropped the subtitle when it was published in 1946, and only one of the translations, during Orwell's lifetime, the Telugu version, kept it. Other title variations include subtitles like "A Satire" and "A Contemporary Satire". Orwell suggested the title Union des républiques socialistes animales for the French translation, which abbreviates to URSA, the Latin word for "bear", a symbol of Russia. It also played on the French name of the Soviet Union, Union des républiques socialistes soviétiques.
Orwell wrote the book between November 1943 and February 1944, when the United Kingdom was in its wartime alliance with the Soviet Union against Nazi Germany and the British intelligentsia held Stalin in high esteem, a phenomenon Orwell hated. The manuscript was initially rejected by several British and American publishers, including one of Orwell's own, Victor Gollancz, which delayed its publication. It became a great commercial success when it did appear, as international relations and public opinion were transformed as the wartime alliance gave way to the Cold War.
Time magazine chose the book as one of the 100 best English-language novels (1923 to 2005); it also featured at number 31 on the Modern Library List of Best 20th-Century Novels, and number 46 on the BBC's The Big Read poll. It won a Retrospective Hugo Award in 1996, and is included in the Great Books of the Western World selection.
Plot summary
The animal populace of the poorly run Manor Farm near Willingdon, England, is ripened for rebellion by neglect at the hands of the irresponsible and alcoholic farmer, Mr. Jones. One night, the exalted boar, Old Major, holds a conference, at which he calls for the overthrow of humans and teaches the animals a revolutionary song called "Beasts of England". When Old Major dies, two young pigs, Snowball and Napoleon, assume command and stage a revolt, driving Mr. Jones off the farm and renaming the property "Animal Farm". They adopt the Seven Commandments of Animalism, the most important of which is, "All animals are equal". The decree is painted in large letters on one side of the barn. Snowball teaches the animals to read and write, while Napoleon educates young puppies on the principles of Animalism. To commemorate the start of Animal Farm, Snowball raises a green flag with a white hoof and horn. Food is plentiful, and the farm runs smoothly. The pigs elevate themselves to positions of leadership and set aside special food items, ostensibly for their health. Following an unsuccessful attempt by Mr. Jones and his associates to retake the farm (later dubbed the "Battle of the Cowshed"), Snowball announces his plans to modernise the farm by building a windmill. Napoleon disputes this idea, and matters come to a head, which culminates in Napoleon's dogs chasing Snowball away and Napoleon effectively declaring himself supreme commander.
Napoleon enacts changes to the governance structure of the farm, replacing meetings with a committee of pigs who will run the farm. Through a young porker named Squealer, Napoleon claims credit for the idea of building the windmill, claiming that Snowball was only trying to win animals to his side. The animals work harder with the promise of easier lives with the windmill. When the animals find the windmill collapsed after a violent storm, Napoleon and Squealer persuade the animals that Snowball is trying to sabotage their project, and begin to purge the farm of animals accused by Napoleon of consorting with his old rival. When some animals recall the Battle of the Cowshed, Napoleon (who was nowhere to be found during the battle) gradually smears Snowball to the point of saying he is a collaborator of Mr. Jones, even dismissing the fact that Snowball was given an award of courage, while falsely representing himself as the main hero of the battle. "Beasts of England" is replaced with "Animal Farm", while an anthem glorifying Napoleon, who is presumably adopting the lifestyle of a man ("Comrade Napoleon"), is composed and sung. Napoleon then conducts a second purge, during which many animals who are alleged to be helping Snowball in plots are executed by Napoleon's dogs, which troubles the rest of the animals. Despite their hardships, the animals are easily pacified by Napoleon's retort that they are better off than they were under Mr. Jones, as well as by the sheep's continual bleating of "four legs good, two legs bad".
Mr. Frederick, a neighbouring farmer, attacks the farm, using blasting powder to blow up the restored windmill. Although the animals win the battle, they do so at great cost, as many, including Boxer the workhorse, are wounded. Although he recovers from this, Boxer eventually collapses while working on the windmill (being almost 12 years old at that point). He is taken away in a knacker's van and a donkey called Benjamin alerts the animals of this, but Squealer quickly waves off their alarm by persuading the animals that the van had been purchased from the knacker by an animal hospital and that the previous owner's signboard had not been repainted. Squealer subsequently reports Boxer's death and honours him with a festival the following day. In truth, Napoleon had engineered the sale of Boxer to the knacker, allowing him and his inner circle to acquire money to buy whisky for themselves.
Years pass, the windmill is rebuilt and another windmill is constructed, which makes the farm a good amount of income. However, the ideals that Snowball discussed, including stalls with electric lighting, heating, and running water, are forgotten, with Napoleon advocating that the happiest animals live simple lives. Snowball has been forgotten, alongside Boxer, with "the exception of the few who knew him". Many of the animals who participated in the rebellion are dead or old. Mr. Jones is also now known to be dead, having "died in an inebriates' home in another part of the country". The pigs start to resemble humans, as they walk upright, carry whips, drink alcohol, and wear clothes. The Seven Commandments are abridged to just one phrase: "All animals are equal, but some animals are more equal than others". The maxim "Four legs good, two legs bad" is similarly changed to "Four legs good, two legs better". Other changes include the Hoof and Horn flag being replaced with a plain green banner and Old Major's skull, which was previously put on display, being reburied.
Napoleon holds a dinner party for the pigs and local farmers, with whom he celebrates a new alliance. He abolishes the practice of the revolutionary traditions and restores the name "The Manor Farm". The men and pigs start playing cards, flattering and praising each other while cheating at the game. Both Napoleon and Mr. Pilkington, one of the farmers, play the ace of spades at the same time and both sides begin fighting loudly over who cheated first. When the animals outside look at the pigs and men, they can no longer distinguish between the two.
Characters
Pigs
- Old Major – An aged prize Middle White boar provides the inspiration that fuels the rebellion. He is also called Willingdon Beauty when showing. He is an allegorical combination of Karl Marx, one of the creators of communism, and Vladimir Lenin, the communist leader of the Russian Revolution and the early Soviet nation, in that he draws up the principles of the revolution. His skull being put on revered public display recalls Lenin, whose embalmed body was left in indefinite repose. By the end of the book, the skull is reburied.
- Napoleon – "A large, rather fierce-looking Berkshire boar, the only Berkshire on the farm, not much of a talker, but with a reputation for getting his own way". An allegory of Joseph Stalin, Napoleon is the leader of Animal Farm.
- Snowball – Napoleon's rival and original head of the farm after Jones's overthrow. His life parallels that of Leon Trotsky, although there is no reference to Snowball having been murdered (as Trotsky was); he may also combine some elements from Lenin.
- Squealer – A small, white, fat large white who serves as Napoleon's second-in-command and minister of propaganda, is a collective portrait of the Soviet nomenklatura and journalists, such as of the national daily Pravda (The Truth), able to justify every twist and turn in Stalin's policy.
- Minimus – A poetic pig who writes the second national anthem of Animal Farm after the singing of "Beasts of England" is banned; later he composes a poem "Comrade Napoleon". Literary theorist John Rodden compares him to the poet Vladimir Mayakovsky, who eulogized Lenin and the Soviet Union, although Mayakovsky neither wrote anthems nor praised Stalin in his poems.
- The piglets – Hinted to be the children of Napoleon and are the first generation of animals subjugated to his idea of animal inequality.
- The young pigs – Four pigs who complain about Napoleon's takeover of the farm but are quickly silenced and later executed, the first animals killed in Napoleon's farm purge. Probably based on the Great Purge of Grigory Zinoviev, Lev Kamenev, Nikolai Bukharin, and Alexei Rykov.
- Pinkeye – A minor pig who is mentioned only once; he is the taste-tester that samples Napoleon's food to make sure it is not poisoned, in response to rumours about an assassination attempt on Napoleon.
Humans
- Mr. Jones – A heavy drinker who is the original owner of Manor Farm, a farm in disrepair with farmhands who often loaf on the job. He is an allegory of Russian Tsar Nicholas II, who was forced to abdicate following the February Revolution of 1917 and was executed, along with the rest of his family, by the Bolsheviks on 17 July 1918. The animals revolt after Jones goes on a drinking binge, returns hungover the following day and neglects them completely. Jones is married, but his wife plays no active role in the book. She seems to live with her husband's drunkenness, going to bed while he stays up drinking until late into the night. In her only other appearance, she hastily throws a few things into a travel bag and flees when she sees that the animals are revolting. Towards the end of the book, Napoleon's "favourite sow" wears her old Sunday dress.
- Mr. Frederick – The tough owner of Pinchfield Farm, a small but well-kept neighbouring farm, who briefly allies with Napoleon. Animal Farm shares land boundaries with Pinchfield on one side and Foxwood on another, making Animal Farm a "buffer zone" between the two bickering farmers. The animals of Animal Farm are terrified of Frederick, as rumours abound of him abusing his animals and entertaining himself with cockfighting. Napoleon allies with Frederick to sell surplus timber that Pilkington also sought, but is enraged to learn Frederick paid him in counterfeit money. Shortly after the swindling, Frederick and his men invade Animal Farm, killing many animals and destroying the windmill. The brief alliance and subsequent invasion may allude to the Molotov–Ribbentrop Pact and Operation Barbarossa.
- Mr. Pilkington – The easy-going but crafty and well-to-do owner of Foxwood Farm, a large neighbouring farm overgrown with weeds. Pilkington is wealthier than Frederick and owns more land, but his farm needs care as opposed to Frederick's smaller but more efficiently run farm. Although on bad terms with Frederick, Pilkington is also concerned about the animal revolution that deposed Jones and is worried that this could also happen to him.
- Mr. Whymper – A man hired by Napoleon to act as the liaison between Animal Farm and human society. At first, he acquires necessities that cannot be produced on the farm, such as dog biscuits and paraffin wax, but later he procures luxuries like alcohol for the pigs.
Equines
- Boxer – A loyal, kind, dedicated, extremely strong, hard-working, and respectable cart-shire horse, although quite naive and gullible. Boxer does a large share of the physical labour on the farm. He is shown to hold the belief that "Napoleon is always right." At one point, he questions Squealer's statement that Snowball was always against the welfare of the farm, causing him to be attacked by Napoleon's dogs, however Boxer's immense strength repels the attack, worrying the pigs that their authority can be challenged. Boxer has been compared to Alexey Stakhanov, a diligent and enthusiastic role model of the Stakhanovite movement. He has been described as "faithful and strong"; he believes any problem can be solved if he works harder. When Boxer is injured, Napoleon sells him to a local knacker to buy himself whisky, and Squealer gives a moving account, falsifying the circumstances of Boxer's death.
- Mollie – A self-centred, self-indulgent, and vain young white mare who quickly leaves for another farm after the revolution, like those who left Russia after the fall of the Tsar. She is only once mentioned again.
- Clover – A gentle, caring mare, who shows concern, especially for Boxer, who often pushes himself too hard. Clover can read all the letters of the alphabet, but cannot "put words together".
- Benjamin – A donkey, one of the oldest, wisest animals on the farm, and one of the few who can read properly. He is sceptical, temperamental and cynical: his most frequent remark is, "Life will go on as it has always gone on – that is, badly". Academic Morris Dickstein has suggested there is "a touch of Orwell himself in this creature's timeless scepticism" and indeed, friends called Orwell "Donkey George", "after his grumbling donkey Benjamin, in Animal Farm". Benjamin manages to evade the purges and survive despite the threat he potentially poses given his knowledge, his age, and his equivocal, albeit apolitical, positions.
Other animals
- Muriel – A goat who is another of the oldest, wisest animals on the farm and friends with all of the animals on the farm. Similar to Benjamin, Muriel is one of the few animals on the farm who is not a pig but can read. She survives, as does Benjamin, by eschewing politics.
- The puppies – Offspring of Jessie and Bluebell, the puppies were taken away at birth by Napoleon and raised by him to serve as his powerful security force.
- Moses – The Raven, "Mr. Jones's especial pet, was a spy and a tale-bearer, but he was also a clever talker". Initially following Mrs. Jones into exile, he reappears several years later and resumes his role of talking but not working. He regales Animal Farm's denizens with tales of a wondrous place beyond the clouds called "Sugarcandy Mountain, that happy country where we poor animals shall rest forever from our labours!" Orwell portrays established religion as "the black raven of priestcraft – promising pie in the sky when you die, and faithfully serving whoever happens to be in power". His preaching to the animals heartens them, and Napoleon allows Moses to reside at the farm "with an allowance of a gill of beer daily", akin to how Stalin brought back the Russian Orthodox Church during the Second World War.
- The sheep – They are not given individual names or personalities. They show limited understanding of Animalism and the political atmosphere of the farm, yet nonetheless, they are the voice of blind conformity as they bleat their support of Napoleon's ideals with jingles during his speeches and meetings with Snowball. Their constant bleating of "four legs good, two legs bad" was used as a device to drown out any opposition or alternative views from Snowball, much as Stalin used hysterical crowds to drown out Trotsky. Towards the end of the book, Squealer (the propagandist) trains the sheep to alter their slogan to "four legs good, two legs better", which they dutifully do.
- The hens – The hens are promised following the rebellion that they will get to keep their eggs, which are stolen from them under Mr. Jones, however, their eggs are soon taken from them under the premise of buying goods from outside the farm. The hens are among the first to rebel, albeit unsuccessfully, against Napoleon, being brutally suppressed through starvation. They represent the Ukrainian victims of the Holodomor.
- The cows – Unnamed. The cows are enticed into the revolution by promises that their milk will not be stolen but can be used to raise their calves. Their milk is then stolen by the pigs, who learn to milk them. The milk is stirred into the pigs' mash every day, while the other animals are denied such luxuries.
- The cat – Unnamed and never seen to carry out any work. The cat is absent for long periods and is forgiven because her excuses are so convincing and she "purred so affectionately that it was impossible not to believe in her good intentions". She has no interest in the politics of the farm, and the only time she is recorded as having participated in an election, she is found to have actually "voted on both sides".
- The ducks – Unnamed.
- The roosters – One arranges to wake Boxer early, and a black one acts as a trumpeter for Napoleon since he was a young cockerel.
- The geese – Unnamed. One gander commits suicide by eating nightshade berries.
- The rats – Unnamed. Classed among the wild animals, unsuccessful attempts were made to civilise them and teach them the principles of Animalism.
Genre and style
George Orwell's Animal Farm is an example of a political satire and an allegory that was intended to have a "wider application", according to Orwell himself, in terms of its relevance. Stylistically, the work shares many similarities with some of Orwell's other works, most notably Nineteen Eighty-Four, as both have been considered works of Swiftian satire. Furthermore, these two prominent works seem to suggest Orwell's bleak view of the future for humanity; he seems to stress the potential/current threat of dystopias similar to those in Animal Farm and Nineteen Eighty-Four. In these kinds of works, Orwell distinctly references the disarray and traumatic conditions of Europe following the Second World War. Orwell's style and writing philosophy as a whole were very concerned with the pursuit of truth in writing.
Orwell was committed to communicating straightforwardly, given the way that he felt words were commonly used in politics to deceive and confuse. For this reason, he is careful, in Animal Farm, to make sure the narrator speaks in an unbiased and uncomplicated fashion. The difference is seen in the way that the animals speak and interact, as the general moral animals seem to speak their minds clearly, while the wicked animals on the farm, such as Napoleon, twist language in such a way that it meets their insidious desires. This style reflects Orwell's proximity to the issues facing Europe at the time and his determination to comment critically on Stalin's Soviet Russia.
Background
Origin and writing
Just as Nineteen Eighty-Four would be inspired by Yevgeny Zamyatin's We, Animal Farm also had its influences: "In 1937, the year in which Orwell said he first thought of Animal Farm, Gollancz's Left Book Club published both The Road to Wigan Pier and a left-wing children's book, The Adventures of the Little Pig and Other Stories by F. Le Gros and Ida Clark."
George Orwell wrote the manuscript between November 1943 and February 1944 after his experiences during the Spanish Civil War, which he described in Homage to Catalonia (1938). In the preface of a 1947 Ukrainian edition of Animal Farm, he explained how escaping the communist purges in Spain taught him "how easily totalitarian propaganda can control the opinion of enlightened people in democratic countries". This motivated Orwell to expose and strongly condemn what he saw as the Stalinist corruption of the original socialist ideals. Homage to Catalonia sold poorly; after seeing Arthur Koestler's best-selling Darkness at Noon about the Moscow Trials, Orwell decided that fiction would be the best way to describe totalitarianism.
Immediately before writing the book, Orwell quit the BBC. He was also upset about a booklet for propagandists the Ministry of Information had put out. The booklet included instructions on how to quell ideological fears of the Soviet Union, such as directions to claim that the Red Terror was a figment of Nazi imagination.
In the preface, Orwell described the source of the idea of setting the book on a farm:
I saw a little boy, perhaps ten years old, driving a huge carthorse along a narrow path, whipping it whenever it tried to turn. It struck me that if only such animals became aware of their strength we should have no power over them, and that men exploit animals in much the same way as the rich exploit the proletariat.
In 1944, the manuscript was almost lost when a German V-1 flying bomb destroyed his London home. Orwell spent hours sifting through the rubble to find the pages intact.
Publication
Publishing
Orwell initially encountered difficulty getting the manuscript published, largely due to fears that the book might upset the alliance between Britain, the United States, and the Soviet Union. Four publishers refused to publish Animal Farm, yet one had initially accepted the work but declined it after consulting the Ministry of Information. Eventually, Secker and Warburg published the first edition in 1945.
During World War II, it became clear to Orwell that anti-Soviet literature was not something which most major publishing houses would touch – including his regular publisher Gollancz. He also submitted the manuscript to Faber and Faber, where the poet T. S. Eliot (who was a director of the firm) rejected it; Eliot wrote back to Orwell praising the book's "good writing" and "fundamental integrity", but declared that they would only accept it for publication if they had some sympathy for the viewpoint "which I take to be generally Trotskyite". Eliot said he found the view "not convincing", and contended that the pigs were made out to be the best to run the farm; he posited that someone might argue "what was needed ... was not more communism but more public-spirited pigs". Orwell let André Deutsch, who was working for Nicholson & Watson in 1944, read the typescript, and Deutsch was convinced that Nicholson & Watson would want to publish it; however, they did not, and "lectured Orwell on what they perceived to be errors in Animal Farm". In his London Letter on 17 April 1944 for Partisan Review, Orwell wrote that it was "now next door to impossible to get anything overtly anti-Russian printed. Anti-Russian books do appear, but mostly from Catholic publishing firms and always from a religious or frankly reactionary angle".
The publisher Jonathan Cape, who had initially accepted Animal Farm, subsequently rejected the book after an official at the British Ministry of Information warned him off – although the civil servant who it is assumed gave the order was later found to be a Soviet spy. Writing to Leonard Moore, a partner in the literary agency of Christy & Moore, publisher Jonathan Cape explained that the decision had been taken on the advice of a senior official in the Ministry of Information. Such flagrant anti-Soviet bias was unacceptable, and the choice of pigs as the dominant class was thought to be especially offensive. It may reasonably be assumed that the "important official" was a man named Peter Smollett, who was later unmasked as a Soviet agent. Orwell was suspicious of Smollett/Smolka, and he would be one of the names Orwell included in his list of Crypto-Communists and Fellow-Travellers sent to the Information Research Department in 1949. The publisher wrote to Orwell, saying:
If the fable were addressed generally to dictators and dictatorships at large then publication would be all right, but the fable does follow, as I see now, so completely the progress of the Russian Soviets and their two dictators , that it can apply only to Russia, to the exclusion of the other dictatorships.
Another thing: it would be less offensive if the predominant caste in the fable were not pigs. I think the choice of pigs as the ruling caste will no doubt give offence to many people, and particularly to anyone who is a bit touchy, as undoubtedly the Russians are.
Frederic Warburg also faced pressures against publication, even from people in his own office and from his wife Pamela, who felt that it was not the moment for ingratitude towards Stalin and the Red Army, which had played a major part in defeating Adolf Hitler. A Russian translation was printed in the paper Posev, and in permitting a Russian translation of Animal Farm, Orwell refused in advance all royalties. A translation in Ukrainian, which was produced in Germany, was confiscated in large part by the American wartime authorities and handed over to the Soviet repatriation commission.
In October 1945, Orwell wrote to Frederic Warburg expressing interest in pursuing the possibility that the political cartoonist David Low might illustrate Animal Farm. Low had written a letter saying that he had had "a good time with Animal Farm – an excellent bit of satire – it would illustrate perfectly". Nothing came of this, and a trial issue produced by Secker & Warburg in 1956 illustrated by John Driver was abandoned. The Folio Society published an edition in 1984 illustrated by Quentin Blake and an edition illustrated by the cartoonist Ralph Steadman was published by Secker & Warburg in 1995 to celebrate the fiftieth anniversary of the first edition of Animal Farm.
Preface
Orwell originally wrote a preface complaining about British self-censorship and how the British people were suppressing criticism of the USSR, their World War II ally:
The sinister fact about literary censorship in England is that it is largely voluntary ... Things are kept right out of the British press, not because the Government intervenes but because of a general tacit agreement that "it wouldn't do" to mention that particular fact.
Although the first edition allowed space for the preface in the author's proof, it was not included, and the page numbers had to be renumbered at the last minute. As of June 2009, most editions of the book have not included it.
In 1972, Ian Angus found the original typescript titled "The Freedom of the Press", and Bernard Crick published it, together with his introduction, in The Times Literary Supplement on 15 September 1972 as "How the essay came to be written". Orwell's essay criticised British self-censorship by the press, specifically the suppression of unflattering descriptions of Stalin and the Soviet government. The same essay also appeared in the Italian 1976 edition of Animal Farm with another introduction by Crick, claiming to be the first edition with the preface. Other publishers were still declining to publish it.
Reception
Contemporary reviews of the work were not universally positive. Writing in the American The New Republic magazine, George Soule expressed his disappointment in the book, writing that it "puzzled and saddened me. It seemed on the whole dull. The allegory turned out to be a creaking machine for saying in a clumsy way things that have been said better directly". Soule believed that the animals were not consistent enough with their real-world inspirations, and said, "It seems to me that the failure of this book (commercially it is already assured of tremendous success) arises from the fact that the satire deals not with something the author has experienced, but rather with stereotyped ideas about a country which he probably does not know very well".
The Guardian on 24 August 1945 called Animal Farm "a delightfully humorous and caustic satire on the rule of the many by the few". Tosco Fyvel, writing in Tribune on the same day, called the book "a gentle satire on a certain State and on the illusions of an age which may already be behind us". Julian Symons responded, on 7 September, "Should we not expect, in Tribune at least, acknowledgement of the fact that it is a satire not at all gentle upon a particular State – Soviet Russia? It seems to me that a reviewer should have the courage to identify Napoleon with Stalin, and Snowball with Trotsky, and express an opinion favourable or unfavourable to the author, upon a political ground. In a hundred years perhaps, Animal Farm may be simply a fairy story; today it is a political satire with a good deal of point". Animal Farm has been subject to much comment in the decades since these early remarks.
Between 1952 and 1957, the CIA, in an operation codenamed Aedinosaur, sent millions of balloons carrying copies of the novel into Poland, Hungary and Czechoslovakia, whose air forces tried to shoot the balloons down. The Information Research Department, a secret Cold War propaganda agency of the British government, translated the book into various languages such as Arabic.
Time magazine chose Animal Farm as one of the 100 best English-language novels (1923 to 2005); it also featured at number 31 on the Modern Library List of Best 20th-Century Novels. It won a Retrospective Hugo Award in 1996 and is included in the Great Books of the Western World selection.
Popular reading in schools, Animal Farm was ranked the UK's favourite book from school in a 2016 poll.
Animal Farm has also faced an array of challenges in school settings around the US. The following are examples of this controversy that has existed around Orwell's work:
- The John Birch Society in Wisconsin challenged the reading of Animal Farm in 1965 because of its reference to the masses revolting.
- New York State English Council's Committee on Defense Against Censorship found that in 1968, Animal Farm had been widely deemed a "problem book".
- A censorship survey conducted in DeKalb County, Georgia, relating to the years 1979–1982, revealed that many schools had attempted to limit access to Animal Farm due to its "political theories".
- A superintendent in Bay County, Florida, banned Animal Farm at the middle school and high school levels in 1987.
- The Board quickly brought back the book, however, after receiving complaints of the ban as "unconstitutional".
- Animal Farm was removed from the Stonington, Connecticut school district curriculum in 2017.
Animal Farm has also faced similar forms of resistance in other countries. The ALA also mentions the way that the book was prevented from being featured at the International Book Fair in Moscow, Russia, in 1977 and banned from schools in the United Arab Emirates for references to practices or actions that defy Arab or Islamic beliefs, such as pigs or alcohol.
In the same manner, Animal Farm has also faced relatively recent issues in China. In 2018, the Chinese government decided to censor all online posts about or referring to Animal Farm. However, the book itself, as of 2019, remains sold in stores. Amy Hawkins and Jeffrey Wasserstrom of The Atlantic stated in 2019 that the book is widely available in mainland China for several reasons: censors believe the general public is unlikely to read a highbrow book, because the elites who do read books feel connected to the ruling party anyway, and because the Communist Party sees being too aggressive in blocking cultural products as a liability. The authors stated: "It was – and remains – as easy to buy 1984 and Animal Farm in Shenzhen or Shanghai as it is in London or Los Angeles". An enhanced version of the book, launched in India in 2017, was widely praised for capturing the author's intent, by republishing the proposed preface of the First Edition and the preface he wrote for the Ukrainian edition.
Analysis
Animalism
"Seven Commandments" redirects here. For the Noahide code, see Seven Laws of Noah. For The Bronx Is Burning episode, see The Seven Commandments.Snowball, Napoleon, and Squealer adapt Old Major's ideas into "a complete system of thought", which they formally name Animalism, an allegoric reference to Communism, not to be confused with the philosophy of Animalism. Soon after, Napoleon and Squealer partake in activities associated with the humans (drinking alcohol, sleeping in beds, trading), which were explicitly prohibited by the Seven Commandments. Squealer is employed to alter the Seven Commandments to account for this humanisation, an allusion to the Soviet government's revising of history to exercise control of the people's beliefs about themselves and their society.
The original commandments are:
- Whatever goes upon two legs is an enemy.
- Whatever goes upon four legs, or has wings, is a friend.
- No animal shall wear clothes.
- No animal shall sleep in a bed.
- No animal shall drink alcohol.
- No animal shall kill any other animal.
- All animals are equal.
These commandments are also distilled into the maxim "Four legs good, two legs bad!" which is primarily used by the sheep on the farm, often to disrupt discussions and disagreements between animals on the nature of Animalism.
Later, Napoleon and his pigs secretly revise some commandments to clear themselves of accusations of law-breaking. The changed commandments are as follows, with the changes bolded:
- No animal shall sleep in a bed with sheets.
- No animal shall drink alcohol to excess.
- No animal shall kill any other animal without cause.
- All animals are equal but some animals are more equal than others.
Eventually, these are replaced with the maxims, "All animals are equal, but some animals are more equal than others", and "Four legs good, two legs better" as the pigs become more anthropomorphic. This is an ironic twist to the original purpose of the Seven Commandments, which was supposed to keep order within Animal Farm by uniting the animals together against the humans and preventing animals from following the humans' evil habits. Through the revision of the commandments, Orwell demonstrates how simply political dogma can be turned into malleable propaganda.
Significance and allegory
Orwell biographer Jeffrey Meyers has written, "virtually every detail has political significance in this allegory". Orwell himself wrote in 1946, "Of course I intended it primarily as a satire on the Russian revolution ... that kind of revolution (violent conspiratorial revolution, led by unconsciously power-hungry people) can only lead to a change of masters revolutions only effect a radical improvement when the masses are alert". In a preface for a 1947 Ukrainian edition, he stated, "for the past ten years I have been convinced that the destruction of the Soviet myth was essential if we wanted a revival of the socialist movement. On my return from Spain I thought of exposing the Soviet myth in a story that could be easily understood by almost anyone and which could be easily translated into other languages".
The revolt of the animals against Farmer Jones is Orwell's analogy with the October 1917 Bolshevik Revolution. The Battle of the Cowshed has been said to represent the allied invasion of Soviet Russia in 1918, and the defeat of the White Russians in the Russian Civil War. The pigs' rise to preeminence mirrors the rise of a Stalinist bureaucracy in the USSR, just as Napoleon's emergence as the farm's sole leader reflects Stalin's emergence. The pigs' appropriation of milk and apples for their own use, "the turning point of the story" as Orwell termed it in a letter to Dwight Macdonald, stands as an analogy for the crushing of the left-wing 1921 Kronstadt revolt against the Bolsheviks, and the difficult efforts of the animals to build the windmill suggest the various five-year plans. The puppies controlled by Napoleon parallel the nurture of the secret police in the Stalinist structure, and the pigs' treatment of the other animals on the farm recalls the internal terror faced by the populace in the 1930s. In chapter seven, when the animals confess their non-existent crimes and are killed, Orwell directly alludes to the purges, confessions and show trials of the late 1930s. These contributed to Orwell's conviction that the Bolshevik revolution had been corrupted and the Soviet system become rotten.
Peter Edgerly Firchow and Peter Davison contend that the Battle of the Windmill, specifically referencing the Battle of Stalingrad and the Battle of Moscow, represents World War II. During the battle, Orwell first wrote, "All the animals, including Napoleon" took cover. Orwell had the publisher alter this to "All the animals except Napoleon" in recognition of Stalin's decision to remain in Moscow during the German advance. Orwell requested the change after he met Józef Czapski in Paris in March 1945. Czapski, a survivor of the Katyn Massacre and an opponent of the Soviet regime, told Orwell, as Orwell wrote to Arthur Koestler, that it had been "the character greatness of Stalin" that saved Russia from the German invasion.
Other connections that writers have suggested illustrate Orwell's telescoping of Russian history from 1917 to 1943, including the wave of rebelliousness that ran through the countryside after the Rebellion, which stands for the abortive revolutions in Hungary and Germany (Ch. IV); the conflict between Napoleon and Snowball (Ch. V), parallelling "the two rival and quasi-Messianic beliefs that seemed pitted against one another: Trotskyism, with its faith in the revolutionary vocation of the proletariat of the West; and Stalinism with its glorification of Russia's socialist destiny"; Napoleon's dealings with Whymper and the Willingdon markets (Ch. VI), paralleling the Treaty of Rapallo; and Frederick's forged bank notes, parallelling the Molotov–Ribbentrop Pact of August 1939, after which Frederick attacks Animal Farm without warning and destroys the windmill.
The book's close, with the pigs and men in a kind of rapprochement, reflected Orwell's view of the 1943 Tehran Conference that seemed to display the establishment of "the best possible relations between the USSR and the West" – but in reality were destined, as Orwell presciently predicted, to continue to unravel. The disagreement between the allies and the start of the Cold War is suggested when Napoleon and Pilkington, both suspicious, each "played an ace of spades simultaneously".
Similarly, the music in the novel, starting with "Beasts of England" and the later anthems, parallels "The Internationale" and its adoption and repudiation by the Soviet authorities as the anthem of the USSR in the 1920s and 1930s.
According to Masha Gessen, the metamorphosis of the eighth commandment ("some animals are more equal") was likely inspired by similar change of a party line which declared all Soviet people equal: the Russian nation and language suddenly became "first among equals" in official CPSU publications in 1936–1937.
Adaptations
Stage productions
A theatrical version, with music by Richard Peaslee and lyrics by Adrian Mitchell, was staged at the National Theatre London on 25 April 1984, directed by Peter Hall. It toured nine cities in 1985.
A solo version, adapted and performed by Guy Masterson, premiered at the Traverse Theatre Edinburgh in January 1995 and has toured worldwide since.
In 2021, during pandemic restrictions, the National Youth Theatre toured a stage version of Animal Farm; this run included outdoor performances on a farm at Soulton Hall.
A new adaptation written and directed by Robert Icke, designed by Bunny Christie with puppetry designed and directed by Toby Olié opened at the Birmingham Repertory Theatre in January 2022 before touring the UK.
The Russian composer Alexander Raskatov has written an opera based on the book. Its premiere took place on 4 March 2023 in Amsterdam as part of Dutch National Opera's 2022/2023 season.
Films
Animal Farm has been adapted to film twice. Both differ from the novel and have been accused of taking significant liberties, including sanitising some aspects.
- Animal Farm (1954) is an animated film, in which Napoleon is eventually overthrown in a second revolution. In 1974, E. Howard Hunt revealed that he had been sent by the CIA's Psychological Warfare department to obtain the film rights from Orwell's widow, and the resulting 1954 animation was funded by the agency.
- Animal Farm (1999) is a live-action TV version that shows Napoleon's regime collapsing in on itself, with the farm having new human owners, reflecting the collapse of Soviet communism.
Andy Serkis is directing an upcoming animated film adaptation.
Radio dramatisations
A BBC radio version, produced by Rayner Heppenstall, was broadcast in January 1947. Orwell listened to the production at his home in Canonbury Square, London, with Hugh Gordon Porteous, amongst others. Orwell later wrote to Heppenstall that Porteous, "who had not read the book, grasped what was happening after a few minutes".
A further radio production, again using Orwell's dramatisation of the book, was broadcast in January 2013 on BBC Radio 4. Tamsin Greig narrated, and the cast included Nicky Henson as Napoleon, Toby Jones as the propagandist Squealer, and Ralph Ineson as Boxer.
Comic strip
In 1950, Norman Pett and his writing partner Don Freeman were secretly hired by the Information Research Department, a secret department of the Foreign Office, to adapt Animal Farm into a comic strip. This comic was not published in the United Kingdom but ran in Brazilian and Burmese newspapers.
Video game
Developers Nerial and The Dairymen released a game based on the book in December 2020, entitled Orwell's Animal Farm, for Windows, macOS, iOS and Android in coordination with the Orwell Estate.
See also
- Information Research Department
- Authoritarian personality
- History of Soviet Russia and the Soviet Union (1917–1927)
- History of the Soviet Union (1927–1953)
- Ideocracy
- New class
- Anthems in Animal Farm
- Animals, an album based on Animal Farm
Books
- Gulliver's Travels was a favourite book of Orwell's. Swift reverses the role of horses and human beings in the fourth book. Orwell brought to Animal Farm "a dose of Swiftian misanthropy, looking ahead to a time 'when the human race had finally been overthrown."
- Bunt (Revolt), published in 1924, is a book by Polish Nobel laureate Władysław Reymont with a theme similar to Animal Farm.
- White Acre vs. Black Acre, published in 1856 and written by William M. Burwell, is a satirical novel that features allegories for slavery in the United States similar to Animal Farm's portrayal of Soviet history.
- George Orwell's own Nineteen Eighty-Four is a dystopian novel about totalitarianism.
References
Explanatory notes
- Orwell, writing in his review of Franz Borkenau's The Spanish Cockpit in Time and Tide, 31 July 1937, and "Spilling the Spanish Beans", New English Weekly, 29 July 1937
- According to Orwell, Gollancz refused to publish the book due to the fear of spoiling relations with a fundamental ally in the war against Nazism: "I must tell you that it is I think completely unacceptable politically from your point of view (it is anti-Stalin)." Gollancz became very angry at this insinuation; however, on 4 April 1944, he recognized his error of judgment: "You were right and I was wrong. I am so sorry. I have returned the manuscript."
- According to Christopher Hitchens, "the persons of Lenin and Trotsky are combined into one , or, it might even be ... to say, there is no Lenin at all."
- Orwell 1976 p. 25 La libertà di stampa
- Struve, Gleb. Telling the Russians, written for the Russian journal New Russian Wind, reprinted in Remembering Orwell
- A Note on the Text, Peter Davison, Animal Farm, Penguin edition 1989
- In the Preface to Animal Farm Orwell noted, however, "although various episodes are taken from the actual history of the Russian Revolution, they are dealt with schematically and their chronological order is changed."
- Preface to the Ukrainian edition of Animal Farm, reprinted in Orwell:Collected Works, It Is What I Think
Citations
- ^ Meija 2002.
- Bynum 2012.
- 12 Things You 2015.
- Gcse English Literature.
- Orwell 2014, p. 23.
- Bowker 2013, p. 235.
- ^ Davison 2000.
- Orwell 2014, p. 10.
- Bradbury, Malcolm (1989). "Introduction". Animal Farm. Penguin. p. vi.
- Animal Farm: Sixty.
- Alberge, Dalya (17 August 2024). "'It could disappear for ever': Anger over sale of George Orwell archive". The Guardian. Retrieved 6 January 2025.
- Dickstein 2007, p. 134.
- ^ Grossman & Lacayo 2005.
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Further reading
- Bott, George (1968) . Selected Writings. London, Melbourne, Toronto, Singapore, Johannesburg, Hong Kong, Nairobi, Auckland, Ibadan: Heinemann Educational Books. ISBN 978-0-435-13675-8.
- Menchhofer, Robert W. (1990). Animal Farm. Lorenz Educational Press. ISBN 978-0787780616.
- O'Neill, Terry, Readings on Animal Farm (1998), Greenhaven Press. ISBN 1565106512.
External links
- Animal Farm at Faded Page (Canada)
- Animal Farm at Project Gutenberg Australia
- Animal Farm Book Notes from Literapedia Archived 7 January 2010 at the Wayback Machine
- Excerpts from Orwell's letters to his agent concerning Animal Farm
- Literary Journal review
- Orwell's original preface to the book Archived 30 December 2009 at the Wayback Machine
- Animal Farm Revisited by John Molyneux, International Socialism, 44 (1989)
- Animal Farm at the British Library
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