ipl-logo

Similarities Between Animal Farm And Joseph Stalin

737 Words3 Pages

George Orwell represents Joseph Stalin as Napoleon in the book Animal Farm, as an egotistical leader who will go to extreme limits to keep as much power as he can. In the book Napoleon relates to Stalin by being a fierce leader that wanted all the power he could gain. They were both very good talkers and could manipulate a lot of people into doing anf getting things their way. They were also really selfish and did not care about the massacres that went on throughtout to people they were dominant over. Napoleon and Stalin were both power hungry and nothing stopped them.
One of the main causes of The Russian Revolution was the lower class or peasants poverty and maltreatment. The peasants had out-of-date farming methods which led them to periodic famines. While this outrage was continued hunger and inflation got worse. That led these peasant to form a political group called The Union of Toiling Peasants, also known as The UTP, beause they had been dissatisfied with Bolshevik policies (mostly forced grain requisitioning). This new classification became really popular and they started demanding for political equality, land reform, an end to the war, and various liberal reforms. These …show more content…

They ened the Tsarist Regime in Russia. The word tsar means “an emperor”. The word regime means “a government, especially an authoritarian one”. So basically Russia’s goverment back then as mimicking or resembling Communisum. That regime relied on the skill and strength of one man to lead the country forward. Just like in the book Animal Farm, George Orwell represents this by having Mr. Jones play the role as Nicholas II, the tsar at the time before The Revolution. Then the animals (peasants) think they aren’t getting treated fairly so they cause an uprising and take over the old leadership of the farm. All because of there “chief in command,”

Open Document