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We have been assigned to read 'Animal Farm' by George Orwell. I read it, and loved it, by the way. I would like to know which characters and events correspond to which figures and events related to the Russian Revolution. Also, what does Pinkeye (the pig who is made to taste Napoleon's food) signify?

2007-10-17 04:46:17 · 4 answers · asked by Moondance_girl 1 in Arts & Humanities Books & Authors

4 answers

The sites below will help you.

As for Pinkeye, well, the kings used to have food tasters to prevent assassination. Pinkeye performs that service and the fact that Napoleon needs a food taster implies that he, like the kings, has become a hated despot.

A sample:
"Mr. Jones
irresponsible to his animals (lets them starve)
sometimes cruel - beats them with whip
sometimes kind - mixes milk in animal mash
Czar Nicholas II
a poor leader at best, compared to western kings
cruel - sometimes brutal with opponents
Sometimes kind - hired students as spies to make $"

"One of Orwell’s goals in writing Animal Farm was to portray the Russian (or Bolshevik) Revolution of 1917 as one that resulted in a government more oppressive, totalitarian, and deadly than the one it overthrew. Many of the characters and events of Orwell’s novel parallel those of the Russian Revolution: In short, Manor Farm is a model of Russia, and Old Major, Snowball, and Napoleon represent the dominant figures of the Russian Revolution.

Mr. Jones is modeled on Tsar Nicholas II (1868–1918), the last Russian emperor. His rule (1894–1917) was marked by his insistence that he was the uncontestable ruler of the nation. During his reign, the Russian people experienced terrible poverty and upheaval, marked by the Bloody Sunday massacre in 1905 when unarmed protesters demanding social reforms were shot down by the army near Nicholas’ palace. As the animals under Jones lead lives of hunger and want, the lives of millions of Russians worsened during Nicholas’ reign. When Russia entered World War I and subsequently lost more men than any country in any previous war, the outraged and desperate people began a series of strikes and mutinies that signaled the end of Tsarist control. When his own generals withdrew their support of him, Nicholas abdicated his throne in the hopes of avoiding an all-out civil war—but the civil war arrived in the form of the Bolshevik Revolution, when Nicholas, like Jones, was removed from his place of rule and then died shortly thereafter.
Old Major is the animal version of V. I. Lenin (1870–1924), the leader of the Bolshevik Party that seized control in the 1917 Revolution. As old Major outlines the principles of Animalism, a theory holding that all animals are equal and must revolt against their oppressors, Lenin was inspired by Karl Marx’s theory of Communism, which urges the “workers of the world” to unite against their economic oppressors. As Animalism imagines a world where all animals share in the prosperity of the farm, Communism argues that a “communal” way of life will allow all people to live lives of economic equality. Old Major dies before he can see the final results of the revolution, as Lenin did before witnessing the ways in which his disciples carried on the work of reform."

2007-10-17 04:58:20 · answer #1 · answered by johnslat 7 · 1 0

Old Major - Lenin
Napolean - Stalin
Snowball - Leon Trotsky
Squealer - Vyacheslav Molotov
Minimus - admirers of Stalin
Piglets - children of Napolean
Rebel Pigs - the Great Purge

Mr. Jones - Nicholas II of Russia
Mr. Fredrick - Hitler
Mr. Pilkington - the western powers
Boxer - Stakhovonite movement
Clover - 7 commandments
Mollie - upper class
Dogs - Napolean's secret police
Pinkeye - poisoning

2007-10-17 12:00:17 · answer #2 · answered by purdue_softball12 2 · 0 0

You have to remember the characters in 'Animal Farm' are personifications of imaginary persons for plot development.
The story itself is a historical fantasy fiction,
so read it again, and think of who would fit Pinkeye's character in that historic context.

2007-10-17 12:11:48 · answer #3 · answered by Duchamp 5 · 0 0

I loved it too. Have fun doing your own homework!

2007-10-17 11:49:08 · answer #4 · answered by Gravedigger 3 · 0 0

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