George Orwell, born as Eric Blair, was a British novelist best known for his dystopian novels Animal Farm and Nineteen Eighty-Four. Animal Farm was published in 1945 and uses allegory to satirize Stalinism and the Soviet Union. The animals on Manor Farm overthrow their human owner and set up an egalitarian society, but the pigs eventually start behaving like humans, using violence and propaganda to gain complete control. Nineteen Eighty-Four was published in 1949 and depicts a totalitarian surveillance state where the government constantly monitors and controls the thoughts and actions of citizens. Orwell used his novels to criticize totalitarianism and fight for ideals of tolerance, justice, and equality.