Squealer Manipulative Ways Animal Farm, written by George Orwell is an allegory reflecting the horrifying effects of a totalitarian government. One of Orwell’s characters, Squealer (based on Vyacheslav Molotov) is a clever and very persuasive pig. His job: to promote Napoleons personal image and later on, become his intermediary. He cunningly justifies “Comrade Napoleons” actions when the other animals begin to question his authority. He exploits the animals on Animal Farm by using erroneous information and abusing their emotions as techniques to sway them.
This is what causes the animals to rebel. “At last they could stand it no longer”. Now I am going to talk about a power struggle which took place between two of the main characters, snowball and Napoleon two very intelligent pigs. Ever since the taking of the farm there has been ongoing argument between these two as to what changes should be made around the farm. One argument that stands out the most in the novel and eventually decides who will win the power struggle is the debate over the windmill.
What are the main themes that Orwell is concerned with and what techniques does he use to get his message across? Animal farm is one of George Orwell’s most widely known works of literature. The novel follows the events of a group of farm animals who overthrow their human master, and expecting then to create their own communist, self-sufficient society. In this utopia-like ambition, each is respected and can share the gains made by the whole group equally, this idea is named Animalism. Not surprisingly, the result is not at all desirable and the animals find themselves in fact worse of then before.
eating, wearing, experimenting) animals. It is the animal cruelty involved in manufacturing animals that generates a moral concern. The farming industry in particular, carries the burden of feeding a massive population, forcing the industry to maximize farming productivity to fulfill consumer demand through the use of large-scale industrial farming techniques. In order for farming industries to gain any-sort of profit corners are cut to produce remunerative earnings. For years the industry has made efforts to convert their manufacturing process of converting animals to food from the public.
Lies and deception are tools which can be used to maintain a kind of power, a corrupt power. They are dishonest tools of dishonest leaders. This is certainly the case in “Animal Farm” and as Orwell wrote the novella as an allegory for what he believed to be occurring in Communist Russia it is clearly what he believed to be happening in that country. Propaganda is required to “sell” the truths the leaders want believed and in “Animal Farm”, Squealer is the tool used by the corrupt leader to spread the misinformation required to maintain power and Squealer as all knew, “could turn black into white.” The seven commandments were developed from the words of the visionary “Old Major” who foretold the revolution. The principles of animalism were reduced to seven simple rules.
Squealer has all the characteristics of a successful orator; he is charismatic, intelligent, emotional, persuasive, and even hypnotic. He shed tears when speaking about Boxer's death, convinced the animals to lower their food rations, and as he walked to and fro, his tail "moved in a way which was very persuasive." Squealer's name suits him appropriately. Since a pig's primary vocalization is squealing, Squealer squeals nonsense and betrays his animals. While pigs like Napoleon and Snowball are allegorically Stalin and Trotsky, respectively, Squealer has a less definitive role.
87). In this way, Napoleon rules like a tyrant over the animals; he takes advantage of the animals’ blind loyalty and hard work by using it for his own selfish reasons. Old Major declares that man is the cause of suffering. However, when the animals remove the alleged evil of man, the animals continue to suffer. Consequently, by removing man from the scene, the animals pave their own path towards evil.
Critical Lens Bernadette Devlin once said, “To gain that which is worth having, it may be necessary to lose everything else.” What this means is, in order to have the best and what you really believe you deserve, you may have to make many sacrifices. Animal Farm by George Orwell and Fahrenheit 451 by Ray Bradbury both prove this quote through the literary elements of Conflict and Characterization. Animal Farm by George Orwell is a riveting story about animals fighting back. Old Major, a prize winning boar and the acclaimed leader of the other barn animals devises a plan amongst the other animals to create a paradise in which all animals live together with no human beings to dominate or control them. The ideas of this said “paradise” become known as Animalism and are taught to all of the animals as the correct way of life.
‘Animal Farm’ written by George Orwell is a novel where George uses the technique of allegory to demonstrate a series of events that took place during the Russian Revolution in 1917. These events are compared to events that take place in a farm, such as events that arise when the animals in the farm go against Mr Jones, the owner and operator of the farm, and events that arise due to conflicts within the animals. The start of this novel serves as the start of a circle, because of which it is easy to foreshadow how the book will end. Basically via the use of Animalism, George shows how those that revolt eventually turn into a similar rule as the one they were rebelling against, and so the cycle of oppression goes on. The description of Mr Jones’s activities in the first paragraph foreshadows the activities that the pigs indulge in later in the book.
Summary 2 Intensive animal farming has been the center of many questions from the general public, politicians and scientists. One of the main questions that arise is how animals are managed and handled during their life-cycle in small cages that barely fit them. Humans would not be able to suffer the many atrocities that these poor animals are having during their life cycle in a cage – tail docking for pigs and beak trimming for chickens are very painful and sometimes animals do not receive medicine to help and calm them. But many scientists argue that the definition of “well-being” is difficult to define because it depends on the animal cognition, motivation, perception and emotional states. There are solutions to better “well-being” of animals such as finding an alternative system to intensive animal farming; genetic changes the behavioral or physiological nature of the animal and therapeutic help such as tail docking or beak trimming.