Book details
Animal Farm
by George Orwell
1945 · Penguin Books
About the book
On Manor Farm, a group of overworked animals rebels against their negligent human owner, Mr. Jones, to establish a self-governing society based on the principle that all animals are equal. Initially guided by the idealistic seven commandments of Animalism, the community begins to fracture as the pigs, led by Napoleon and Snowball, position themselves as the intellectual elite. Napoleon eventually uses a private force of dogs to exile his rival and consolidate absolute power. Through the manipulation of language and the rewriting of history, the pig leadership reinstates hierarchy and forced labor, eventually mirroring the human tyranny they originally aimed to abolish.
Students of political science and history read this allegory to understand the mechanics of totalitarianism and the erosion of democratic ideals. It provides a concrete framework for how propaganda and the concentration of authority can subvert a popular revolution. The reader walks away with a clear understanding of how absolute power corrupts collective movements and how language can be weaponized to justify inequality. This text remains a primary example of how a society can transition from liberation to a dictatorship under the guise of progress.
Details
- Published
- 1945
- Publisher
- Penguin Books
- ISBN
- 9780140182262
- Language
- EN