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The Allegory of Animal Farm

The Allegory of Animal Farm. Allegory. Characters, setting, and events make sense on the literal level, but are designed to represent OTHER characters, setting, and events. Hans Christian Andersen’s The Ugly Duckling tells the story of the author’s life.

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The Allegory of Animal Farm

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  1. The Allegory of Animal Farm

  2. Allegory • Characters, setting, and events make sense on the literal level, but are designed to represent OTHER characters, setting, and events. • Hans Christian Andersen’s The Ugly Duckling tells the story of the author’s life. • The Wizard of Oz was supposed to persuade people to switch from the gold standard to the silver standard.

  3. Utopia • The perfect place • Look at the character Benjamin to understand Orwell’s views on utopias

  4. Russian Society • At the beginning of the 20th century, Europe and America were evolving into capitalistic, industrial states; Russia remained “backward” in an agrarian economy under the absolute authority of the Tsar/Czar. • Russia was in an appalling state of poverty while the Czar lived in luxury. There was tremendous dissatisfaction. • Tiny minority controlled most of the wealth, while the majority of people were impoverished and oppressed.

  5. Communism • Arose in Russia when the nation’s workers and peasants rebelled against the wealthy and powerful capitalists and aristocrats • Hoped to establish a socialist utopia based on the principles of political philosopher Karl Marx • Opposed to the capitalist idea of “free market”

  6. Karl Marx: Father of Communism • Marx believed that the private ownership of land must be abolished; opposed to capitalism • Believed in “Communal” way of life where everyone shares in prosperity • Invented Communism • Communist Manifesto • “Workers of the world unite”—take over government; overthrown capitalism • Died before the Russian Revolution

  7. Communism • All people are equal • Government owns everything; people own government • The Communist Internationale—official song of the communist party • “Dictatorship of the Proletariat” • Bourgeoisie—Middle Class; skilled workers • Proletariat—Unskilled labor class

  8. Czar Nicholas II • Monarch of Russia, a poor leader at best • Cruel—sometimes brutal with opponents • Sometimes kind—hired students as spies to make money • Believed he was the unquestionable leader of Russia appointed by God • Had unarmed protesters murdered in the streets in 1905

  9. The Revolution of 1917 • Great unrest among the people against the Czar • Revolutionaries overthrew the Czar • “Bolsheviks” (led by Lenin) took control of the Russian government • Nicholas II forced to abdicate the throne that his family had held for three centuries

  10. Vladimir Lenin • Inspired by Marx • Immediately seized power in the name of the Communist Party (1917) • Lenin adopted Marx’s ideas; took land and industry from private control and put them under government supervision. • He believed the bourgeoisie (middle class) exploited the workers and must, therefore, be overthrown. • Understood the emotional impact of simple, powerful slogans like “Workers of the world unite.”

  11. Lenin • Changed Russia’s name to the USSR • Lenin was the leader and Trotsky was his top military man • It is believed Lenin ordered Nicholas II murdered.

  12. Leon Trotsky • One of the leaders of “October Revolution” along with Lenin and Stalin • Believed in “pure” communism; followed Marx; idealist • Brilliant speaker, popular, charismatic leader; famous for impassioned speeches • Wanted to improve life for all in Russia

  13. Joseph Stalin • Average speaker, not educated like Trotsky • Taciturn, gruff, lower-class; preferred to consolidate power behind the scenes • Quiet, brooding; excellent at organization • Didn’t exactly follow Marx’s ideas • Craved power, willing to kill for it

  14. Civil War • From 1918-1921, there was Civil War • Reds (Communists) vs. Whites (foreign countries; sympathetic to the Czar, tried to expel the Reds) • Some “white Russians” who opposed the revolution themselves • Foreign countries (Britain, France, Poland, and USA) were alarmed at the spread of communism but the Red Army led by Trotsky proved successful. • Reds won.

  15. Power Struggle • While Lenin and Trotsky concentrated on the War, Stalin began to take over the machinery of the Communist Party. • Used Trotsky’s enemies to form alliance that would serve him in the future • Lenin became fatally ill and died

  16. Stalin • Took power when Lenin died in 1924 • Benefitted from the fact that education was controlled • Ridiculed Trotsky’s ideas • Secured his power base and engineered the permanent exile of Trotsky in 1929 • The exiled Trotsky was still very useful to Stalin as he now had Trotsky to blame for all the problems and difficulties that Russia suffered

  17. Scapegoat • Trotsky became a national enemy • Used to conjure horrifying images • Current misery paled in comparison to “life with Trotsky”

  18. Stalin • After exiling Trotsky, Stalin began to consolidate his power with intensity • Assumed a complete, totalitarian control • Killed or imprisoned perceived political enemies • Oversaw the purge of approximately 20 million Soviet Citizens (Stalin’s Purge) • Held “show trials”; outcomes had already been decided • Had his opponents denounced as Trotskyists or anti-Stalinist; immediately executed

  19. Propaganda Department of Stalin’s Government • Pravda—Soviet propaganda newspaper • Worked for Stalin to support his image • Lied to convince the people to follow Stalin • Began to voice economic ideas similar to those of Trotsky, but no one had the courage to say so • Mayakovsky-official poet of the government

  20. KGB • Secret police during Stalin’s dictatorship • Not really police, but forced all to support Stalin • Often killed entire families for disobedience • Totally loyal, part of Stalin’s power

  21. Politburo • Policy-making body of the Communist party’s Central Committee • In reality it was merely a force to carry out Stalin’s orders and secure his positions as dictator

  22. Religion • Marx said religion was the “opiate of the people” and a lie • Used to make people not complain and do their work • Stalin knew religion would stop violent revolutions

  23. Supporters • People believed Stalin because he was “Communist” • Many stayed loyal after it was obvious Stalin was a tyrant • Betrayed by Stalin who ignored and killed them

  24. 5 Year Plans • From 1927-1932, new economic plans, called the five year plans, were introduced. • The purpose was to improve industry. • Soviet farmers were to join “collective” farms • Much of the food had to be sent to the government • Any who opposed to his plan were executed • Plans ultimately failed

  25. Russian Revolution • Supposed to fix problems from Czar • Life was even worse long after revolution • Stalin made Czar look like a nice guy

  26. Germany and Great Britain • Stalin negotiated with both Germany and Great Britain • The Russo-German pact of August 1939 allowed Russia to occupy eastern Poland while Germany occupied the rest.

  27. Germany and Great Britain • On June 22, 1941, Germany (Hitler) attacked her ally Russia without warning. • The alliance between Nazism and Communism fell apart and Russia formed an alliance with Britain and the USA. • Because of all the purges order by Stalin, the Nazis almost conquered the USSR.

  28. Cold War • Tehran Conference in 1943 presented the Soviet Union, Great Britain, and America as allies. • By the end of WWII, the Soviet Union became an enemy of its allies as the Cold War intensified.

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