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Repression Of The Government Is Justified In George Orwell's Animal Farm

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In Animal Farm, by George Orwell, the theme is “there are times when the overthrow of the government is justified”. Orwell obviously believes and consistently supports this idea of the rights of the governed. Throughout Animal Farm, Viciously biting at the cruel over powerful governments, Orwell portrays the atrocities of pigs and humans alike and caustically compares people who don't revolt to dumb animals, chanting whatever their leaders have told them. By the gullible shackled animals, especially Boxer, Orwell warns {us} to be aware of the government, but more importantly to be able to help the country by destroying its government. the idea that the declaration of independence {says wonderfully} at its basic level is when a government body is too corrupt, evil, useless or ineffective it is time for a new one. this is also apparent in Animal Farm- after the ‘revolution’ and before the next evil regime food is more plentiful, and Orwell uses descriptive words such as: “clear morning light...ecstasy of that thought...rolled in the dew...sweet summer grass... rich black earth”(Orwell 22). The narrator describes the first harvest: “In …show more content…

justifiable, and right and good. when Napoleon finally ‘completes’ his piggy human self completely into a new ‘jones’, he “carried a whip in his trotter” (Orwell 133)The Whip is the embodiment of bondage and suffering- When the pigs start to use them, to the animals, it is jones coming back. Orwell hammers home these symbols revealing what occurs when a corrupt government is left un-abolished. The Animals look 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”(Orwell 141). When the corrupt government has free reign, or more appropriately free reign, it turns just as bad if not worse than the past

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