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How Does Orwell Use Power In Animal Farm

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Pigs Taking Power In George Orwell’s book Animal Farm, he has a clearly developed theme and moral in his story that he teaches. In Animal Farm, Orwell talks about how power and corruption through communism and tyranny can ruin a community through one of the main characters, Napoleon. One of George Orwell’s themes in Animal Farm was communism and tyranny. In the beginning of the story the animals claimed they were all equal and that no one animal was more than or above any other animal. But as the story progresses the pigs, mainly Napoleon, took more and more power, soon he was above all the animals on the farm. On page sixteen the Seven Commandments were written on the barn wall by Napoleon. He wrote “ No animal shall kill any other animal”. But on page fifty-one he had over eleven animals killed by other animals. Obviously that went against the rules. So, on page fifty-four he had changed the one of the seven commandments …show more content…

On page eighty-four Orwell wrote, “No questions, now, what had happened to the faces of the pigs. The creatures outside looked from pig to man, and from man to pig, and from pig to man again; but already it was impossible to say which was which.” The shows how tyranny can ruin a community because in the beginning Mr. Jones, a human was the tyrant of the farm. All the animals swore they would never be like the humans. Some of their commandments on page sixteen were no animal should wears clothes, drinks alcohol, walks on two legs or sleep in a bed. Later on in the book the pigs, including Napoleon had done every single one of those. Thats why the other animals couldn't tell he pigs apart from the humans. Napoleon their leader and “friend” became something he swore he would never be. Now the animals in his community no longer know what to think of him, like they don’t even know him. To the point where it is no longer a community but a farm with a tyrant

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