Korjaukset

Text from MarieSK - English

  • Animal Farm

  • Animal Farm was written in 1945 by the British author Gorge Orwell.
  • It tells the story of the animals of a farm in England, who get rid of the farmer and organize themselves to live without humans.
  • Written just after the second world war and right in the cold war, the book actually takes on a politic message, even if nothing is really explicit.
  • But we can wonder how can Orwell make a reflection of the stalinism through an animal tale.
  • Firstable, it sounds like a book for children.
  • The characters are animals talking, just like in a tale, the narration is easy to understand, the story is told as if it was happening right now.
  • We guess the wit of Orwell, who tells the story in a pleasant way and give it a universal and ironic meaning.
  • Behind that story, we guess the main historical characters of the stalinism, and even the events of the Russian Revolution.
  • If we take the windmill, Napoleon eventually take over the idea of the enemy he just eliminated, as Stalin in 1927 about the industrialization of Russia.
  • And the book is full of direct references to events of that period.
  • * The abolition of the general meetings of Sunday morning call to remind the liquidation of the last advantages of a worker democracy.
  • * When Napoleon is taking the control of the farm, he chase away Snowball just as Stalin did with Trotski to have the full powers.
  • * Boxer could be compare with Stakhanov, the working class hero shown to advantage.
  • * When the pigs have moved to the farmhouse, Squealer confuses the animals and they can't contradict him because they can't even read.
  • Squealer could be an allegory of propaganda, using the unknowledge of the population to convince that Stalin is a good man.
  • We could easily make a link with Lord of the Flies, written in 1954 by William Golding, who had received the Nobel Prize of Literature in 1983.
  • Just as Animal Farm, behind the adventure-book-looking, there is a bleak conclusion tinged with his era and the nightmare of the second world war.
  • The characters need a chief to decide for them and reassure them from the fear of the monster hidden in the jungle, like the animals need a chief to decide and run the farm.
  • At a moment, the self-proclaimed leader, Jack, says "I was chief, and you were going to do what I said." It can recall "Do you want to see Jones back ?" Jack uses fear of an enemy who anesthetize minds and allows to free from laws and reason.
  • In the both books there is laws, the Seven Commandments written on the wall of the Animal Farm and the reglememt of the children in Lord of the Flies.
  • Just as Animal Farm, this is a book about the mechanism of the power which leaded to world disasters.
  • The rise of the dictator Jack is due to fear and violence, intrinsic to the human race, and those of Napoleon to the gap of reflexion from the animals who don't have the knowledge necessary to contest the orders.
  • Orwell doesn't really denounce stalinism, he prevents us that in every society, power is unavoidable.

AUTA KORJAAMAAN JOKAINEN LAUSE! - English

  • Otsikko
  • Lause 1
  • Lause 2
    • It tells the story of the animals of a farm in England, who get rid of the farmer and organize themselves to live without humans.
      Äänestä nyt!
    • ADD a NEW CORRECTION! - Lause 2ADD a NEW CORRECTION! - Lause 2
  • Lause 3
    • Written just after the second world war and right in the cold war, the book actually takes on a politic message, even if nothing is really explicit.
      Äänestä nyt!
    • ADD a NEW CORRECTION! - Lause 3ADD a NEW CORRECTION! - Lause 3
  • Lause 4
  • Lause 5
  • Lause 6
    • The characters are animals talking, just like in a tale, the narration is easy to understand, the story is told as if it was happening right now.
      Äänestä nyt!
    • ADD a NEW CORRECTION! - Lause 6ADD a NEW CORRECTION! - Lause 6
  • Lause 7
    • We guess the wit of Orwell, who tells the story in a pleasant way and give it a universal and ironic meaning.
      Äänestä nyt!
    • ADD a NEW CORRECTION! - Lause 7ADD a NEW CORRECTION! - Lause 7
  • Lause 8
    • Behind that story, we guess the main historical characters of the stalinism, and even the events of the Russian Revolution.
      Äänestä nyt!
    • ADD a NEW CORRECTION! - Lause 8ADD a NEW CORRECTION! - Lause 8
  • Lause 9
    • If we take the windmill, Napoleon eventually take over the idea of the enemy he just eliminated, as Stalin in 1927 about the industrialization of Russia.
      Äänestä nyt!
    • ADD a NEW CORRECTION! - Lause 9ADD a NEW CORRECTION! - Lause 9
  • Lause 10
  • Lause 11
    • * The abolition of the general meetings of Sunday morning call to remind the liquidation of the last advantages of a worker democracy.
      Äänestä nyt!
    • ADD a NEW CORRECTION! - Lause 11ADD a NEW CORRECTION! - Lause 11
  • Lause 12
    • * When Napoleon is taking the control of the farm, he chase away Snowball just as Stalin did with Trotski to have the full powers.
      Äänestä nyt!
    • ADD a NEW CORRECTION! - Lause 12ADD a NEW CORRECTION! - Lause 12
  • Lause 13
  • Lause 14
    • * When the pigs have moved to the farmhouse, Squealer confuses the animals and they can't contradict him because they can't even read.
      Äänestä nyt!
    • ADD a NEW CORRECTION! - Lause 14ADD a NEW CORRECTION! - Lause 14
  • Lause 15
    • Squealer could be an allegory of propaganda, using the unknowledge of the population to convince that Stalin is a good man.
      Äänestä nyt!
    • ADD a NEW CORRECTION! - Lause 15ADD a NEW CORRECTION! - Lause 15
  • Lause 16
    • We could easily make a link with Lord of the Flies, written in 1954 by William Golding, who had received the Nobel Prize of Literature in 1983.
      Äänestä nyt!
    • ADD a NEW CORRECTION! - Lause 16ADD a NEW CORRECTION! - Lause 16
  • Lause 17
    • Just as Animal Farm, behind the adventure-book-looking, there is a bleak conclusion tinged with his era and the nightmare of the second world war.
      Äänestä nyt!
    • ADD a NEW CORRECTION! - Lause 17ADD a NEW CORRECTION! - Lause 17
  • Lause 18
    • The characters need a chief to decide for them and reassure them from the fear of the monster hidden in the jungle, like the animals need a chief to decide and run the farm.
      Äänestä nyt!
    • ADD a NEW CORRECTION! - Lause 18ADD a NEW CORRECTION! - Lause 18
  • Lause 19
    • At a moment, the self-proclaimed leader, Jack, says "I was chief, and you were going to do what I said." It can recall "Do you want to see Jones back ?" Jack uses fear of an enemy who anesthetize minds and allows to free from laws and reason.
      Äänestä nyt!
    • ADD a NEW CORRECTION! - Lause 19ADD a NEW CORRECTION! - Lause 19
  • Lause 20
    • In the both books there is laws, the Seven Commandments written on the wall of the Animal Farm and the reglememt of the children in Lord of the Flies.
      Äänestä nyt!
    • ADD a NEW CORRECTION! - Lause 20ADD a NEW CORRECTION! - Lause 20
  • Lause 21
  • Lause 22
    • The rise of the dictator Jack is due to fear and violence, intrinsic to the human race, and those of Napoleon to the gap of reflexion from the animals who don't have the knowledge necessary to contest the orders.
      Äänestä nyt!
    • ADD a NEW CORRECTION! - Lause 22ADD a NEW CORRECTION! - Lause 22
  • Lause 23