George Orwell's Animal Farm

512 Words3 Pages

The introduction to my Literary Analysis for “Animal Farm” by George Orwell is that the animals on the farm and the pigs own the animals and land on the farm. The pigs are rude and mean and they don’t care about the other animals on the farm and they didn’t like snowball and they exiled him for thinking about the windmill. The short summary would be that the pigs don’t care and they should be exiled they changed the rules on the side of the barn and nobody even said anything and they were afraid to tell anyone. The thesis is that this is all because the pigs are in charge. The Betrayal of Political Idealism is where Napoleon and the committee of the pigs now make all of the decisions instead of voting after the discussions. Pigs take charge and take their own special rewards such as the milk and apples. The importance is that the pigs are taking the food and milk that the other animals could eat or drink to get stronger so that they could work harder and faster. “In the future all questions relating to the working of the farm would be settled by a special committee of pigs, presided over by himself.” The pigs are sleeping in human beds. The importance of this is that the pigs are betraying the rule that says “No animal shall sleep in a bed.” …show more content…

Because with every word he gains more and more control of the farm. The importance is that if he gains more control the more animals would want to leave to get far away from him. Napoleon wants to control the farm by controlling the young. The importance is that if he controls the young, he can train them to be mean and hurt the other animals to where they submit to him. “No one knew where the dogs came from, but they were the puppies that Napoleon had taken from their mothers and raised them privately. They stayed close to Napoleon. They wagged their tails to Napoleon the way they way wagged their tails at

Open Document