Influencing policy (training slides from Fast Track Impact)
Â
Animal Farm and Russian Revolution
1. Discuss the following within your group.
â Life in the USA would be perfect if everyone were
totally equal.
â You are designing a society in which everyone is
equal. What are the laws?
â What would you do to help people who were less
capable mentally, physically, or socially to âcatch upâ?
â What problems can you foresee that might arise in a
society with enforced âequality for allâ? How would
you handle those problems?
â Do you believe that total equality is possible, or would
human nature assure that some people would
eventually dominate others?
2. George Orwellâs Animal Farm
and
The Russian Revolution
⌠One day I saw a little boy, perhaps ten years old, driving a huge
cart-horse 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.
George Orwell (1947)
3. ⢠Things are about to
get a little strange on
Manor Farm.
⢠Farmer Jones has
just locked up the
henhouse and
stumbled off to bed,
thinking all is well in
his barnyard.
⢠He probably wouldnât
believe the events
that are about to
unfold in the barn.
4. ⢠Old Major, Mr. Jonesâs
prize-winning boar,
has just gathered the
animals together for a
meeting.
⢠Pigs, hens, horses,
dogs, ducks, and goats
congregate to listen to
Old Major share his
dream.
5. ⢠Humans are the enemy, Old Major tells his
fellow farm animals. They produce
nothing, yet they own everything.
⢠Animals, however, work their whole lives
for their masters. They receive only
enough food to keep them working.
6. ⢠Old Major believes
that someday this
will all change.
â Animals will work
together to overthrow
their oppressors.
â Animals will create their
own farm where they
will live and work in
harmony, plenty, and
equality.
â The days of slavery will
end.
â The rebellion will come.
â Every animal must be
ready!
8. Literal and Figurative Meaning in
Animal Farm
⢠George Orwellâs Animal Farm is an
allegory. Therefore, the novel has
both a literal and figurative
meaning.
â On the surface, Animal Farm tells the
story of farm animals who are tired of
obeying the orders of a cruel master.
This is the storyâs literal meaning.
⢠A pig is a pig.
â It is important to understand that
Animal Farm also has a figurative
meaning. This novel also tells the
story of Soviet Russia during the
Russian Revolution.
⢠A pig is a political leader.
9. Satire
⢠Animal Farm is also written as a satire.
â A satire is a form of literature that criticizes a
subject by making it seem ridiculous,
amusing, or contemptible.
â Purpose of satire:
⢠To make a moral judgment
⢠To correct wrongs
⢠To criticize injustices
â Animal Farm makes the Soviet Union seem
both laughable and despicable.
10. Animal Farm and The Russian
Revolution: A Comparison
⢠In order to understand George Orwellâs
literary masterpiece Animal Farm, you
must know a few people and events that
played important roles in the Russian
Revolution.
11. Czar Nicholas II
⢠Czar Nicholas II was Russiaâs last
czar. He was part of the Romanov
dynasty that ruled Russia for over
300 years!
⢠Czar means emperor and comes
from the word Caesar.
⢠Russian czars lived in a magnificent
palace called the Kremlin.
⢠Czar Nicholas was narrow-minded
and incompetent. He was an
autocrat â a self-appointed ruler
who holds all the political power.
⢠In March 1917, there were food riots
and army mutinies in Petrograd (a
Russian city). Czar Nicholas
couldnât cope with the difficult
situation, so he abdicated the
throne.
In Animal Farm âŚ
Mr. Jones = Czar Nicholas II
12. Farmer Jones = Czar Nicholas II
⢠Farmer Jones
â The irresponsible owner of the
farm
â Lets his animals starve and beats
them with a whip
â Sometimes shows random
kindness
⢠Czar Nicholas II
â Weak Russian leader during the
early 1900s
â Often cruel and brutal to his
subjects
â Displays isolated kindess
13. Karl Marx
⢠Marx believed the workers
(proletarians) were the true producers
of wealth. But the capitalists
(bourgeoisie) owned the means of
production â land and industry.
Therefore, the capitalists made huge
profits while the workers earned just
enough to survive. Not fair!
⢠Marx called for âworkers of the worldâ
to unite against their capitalist
oppressors.
⢠Marx believed that eventually the
proletariat would become so
numerous and so impoverished that
they would rise up against the
capitalist system throughout the world.
In Animal Farm âŚ
Old Major = Karl Marx
14. Characters
⢠Old Major
â An old boar whose speech about
the evils perpetrated by humans
rouses the animals into rebelling.
â His philosophy concerning the
tyranny of Man is named
Animalism.
â He teaches the animals the song
âBeasts of Englandâ
â Dies before revolution
⢠Karl Marx
â The inventor of communism
â Wants to unite the working class
to overthrow the government.
â Dies before the Russian
Revolution
15. Leon Trotsky
⢠Trotsky was a brilliant intellectual
and speaker who organized the
Red Army and led it to victory
against the White Armies in the
Civil War of 1918-1919.
⢠Trotsky and Stalin disagreed on
Russiaâs future. Trotsky wanted the
Communist revolution to be
worldwide. Stalin wanted to protect
the Soviet Union from outside
forces (keep communism in the
USSR).
⢠Stalin defeated Trotsky at the
Communist Party Congress in 1927
and gained control of the secret
police.
⢠Trotsky was chased away by the
KGB (secret police) and fled to
Mexico City, where a Soviet agent
killed him with an axe in 1940.
In Animal Farm âŚ
Snowball = Leon Trotsky
16. Snowball = Leon Trotsky
⢠Snowball
â Boar who becomes one of the
rebellionâs most valuable leaders.
â After drawing complicated plans
for the construction of a windmill,
he is chased off of the farm
forever by Napoleonâs dogs and
thereafter used as a scapegoat for
the animalsâ troubles.
⢠Leon Trotsky
â A pure communist leader who was
influenced by the teachings of Karl
Marx.
â He wanted to improve life for
people in Russia, but was driven
away by Leninâs KGB.
17. Joseph Stalin
⢠While most Russian leaders
belonged to the middle-class, Joseph
Stalin was born into the peasant
class.
⢠Unlike Trotsky, Stalin was not well-
educated and could not discuss
Marxist theory on a sophisticated
level.
⢠Stalin was named General Secretary
of the Communist Party in 1922. He
was in charge of dull paperwork for
the Communist party.
⢠Though this position seemed
unimportant, Stalin used his position
as secretary to gain supporters for his
future rise to power. He eventually
defeated Trotsky in the struggle for
power.
In Animal Farm âŚ
Napoleon = Joseph Stalin
18. Napoleon = Joseph Stalin
⢠Napoleon
â Boar who leads the rebellion against
Farmer Jones
â After the rebellionâs success, he
systematically begins to control all
aspects of the farm until he is an
undisputed tyrant.
⢠Joseph Stalin
â The communist dictator of the Soviet
Union from 1922-1953 who killed all
who opposed him.
â He loved power and used the KGB
(secret police) to enforce his ruthless,
corrupt antics.
19. ⢠Under Joseph Stalin, the country fell under
totalitarianism â a form of government with
strong central rule that tries to control individual
freedoms.
â Stalin instituted the âFive Years Planâ to increase
economic growth, but ordered farms to give most of
their produce to the government.
â Peasants often slaughtered their animals and burned
down their farm buildings rather than give them to the
Soviets!
â Peasants who opposed Stalin were sent to labor
camps, deported, or executed.
â The Five-Year Plan created a man-made famine. Five
million people starved to death or were executed as a
result!
20. Moscow Purge Trials
⢠By 1936, Stalin began to use what would
become known as the Moscow Purge Trials to
control workers.
â In 1936, sixteen prominent and loyal Communists
publicly confessed to unbelievable crimes â spying,
terrorism, and plotting with Leon Trotsky.
⢠There was no evidence of their guilt other than the
confessions.
⢠All sixteen were immediately executed.
â About 70% of the Party leadership became victims of
the Great Purge.
â These trials served as an example of what would
happen to people if they opposed Stalin.
21. ⢠Although exact figures cannot be
determined, some historians have
estimated that Joseph Stalin may have
killed as many as 20 million people!
⢠To put this into perspective, consider the
fact that Adolf Hitler is believed to have
killed 11 million people in the Holocaust!
22. Squealer & Boxer
⢠Squealer   Â
â A big mouth pig who becomes Napoleonâs
mouthpiece. Throughout the novel, he displays
his ability to manipulate the animalsâ thoughts
through the use of hollow, yet convincing
rhetoric.
â Represents the propaganda department that
worked to support Stalinâs image; the members
of the department would use lies to convince
the people to follow Stalin.
⢠Boxer   Â
â A dedicated but dimwitted horse who aids in
the building of the windmill but is sold to a glue-
boiler after collapsing from exhaustion.
â Represents the dedicated, but tricked
communist supporters of Stalin. Many stayed
loyal even after it was obvious Stalin was a
tyrant. Eventually they were betrayed, ignored,
and even killed by him.
Boxer
Squealer
23. Jessie & Moses
⢠Jessie
â The farm's sheepdog, she keeps tabs
on the pigs and is among the first to
suspect that something is wrong at
Animal Farm.
⢠Moses   Â
â A tame raven and sometimes-pet of
Jones who tells the animals stories
about a paradise called Sugarcandy
Mountain.
â Moses represents religion. Stalin used
religious principles to influence people
to work and to avoid revolt.
Jessie
Moses
24. More Characters
PilkingtonÂ
Jones' neighbor, he finds a way to profit from Animal Farm by forming an
alliance with the pigs.
Muriel
A goat who believes in the rebellion, she watches as Animal Farm slips
away from its founding principles.
Mollie
A vain horse who resists the animal rebellion because she doesn't want to
give up the petting and treats she receives from humans. Mollie represents
vain, selfish people in Russia and throughout the world who ignored the
revolution and sought residence in more inviting countries.
Benjamin
The most cynical of all the animals, the farm's donkey doubts the leadership
of the pigs but is faithfully devoted to Boxer. Benjamin represents all the
skeptical people in Russia and elsewhere who werenât sure revolution would
change anything.
The Sheep
Not tremendously clever, the sheep remind themselves of the principles of
animalism by chanting "four legs good, two legs bad."
The Dogs
Napoleonâs private army that used fear to force the animals to work; they killed
any opponent of Napoleon. The dogs represent Stalinâs loyal KGB (secret
police). The KGB were not really police, but mercenaries used to force
support for Stalin.
25.
26. Animalism = Communism
⢠Animalism
â Taught by Old Major
â No rich, but no poor
â Better life for workers
â All animals are equal
â Everyone owns the
farm
⢠Communism
â Invented by Karl Marx
â All people are equal
â Government owns
everything
â People own the
government
27. Animal Farm Revolution
= Russian Revolution
⢠Animal Farm Revolution
â Was supposed to make life
better for all, but . . .
⢠Life was worse at the end.
⢠The leaders became the
same as, or worse than the
other farmers (humans) they
rebelled against.
⢠Russian Revolution
â Was supposed to fix the
problems created by the
Czar, but . . .
⢠Life was even worse after
the revolution.
⢠Stalin made the Czar look
like a nice guy.