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Orwell's portrayal of the cold war in his book "Animal Farm"
Title: Orwell's portrayal of the cold war in his book "Animal Farm"
Category: Literature / European Literature
Details: Words: 744 | Pages: 3.2 (approximately 235 words/page)
Orwell's portrayal of the cold war in his book "Animal Farm"
George Orwell's novel, Animal Farm, is a deceitfully simple story about a group of farm animals who, tired of toiling for the benefit of humans, rebel and create their own way of life only to find themselves, several years later, toiling for the benefit of one of their own kind, the pigs. Because of the simplicity of this novel, many people consider it to be a children's story. However, beyond it's lighthearted surface, it is
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showed last 75 words of 744 total
of human control, ends with the animals under the control of an even more oppressive ruler. Lennin's overthrow of the oppressive Czarist government, in the end, led to the tyrannical and totalitarian reign of Stalin. As long as there are such beliefs as, 'All animals are equal, but some animals are more equal than others,' (p. 88) all rebellions for equality will fail because there will always be some group to fill the role of superiority.
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