"All animals are equal, but some animals are more equal" This is true in George Orwell's zoo. The first half of this sentence reflects part of the fundamental idea of animalistic dreamer Old Major. The bottom part is intended to be tampered with to meet pig needs and needs. Pigs in zoos utilize relatively high intelligence to utilize them. In Chapter 6, the pig changed "seven scorpions" clearly and said "animals go to bed in bed" (p. 79).
George Orwell's zoo is George Orwell's zoo is only a political argument or will it make the story itself to the reader? In this personal study, I write an article about George Orwell Zoo. The novel is entertaining my political debate in this process. In the opening chapter, we will introduce the revolutionary theme that dominates the entire novel and introduce the farm animals. In Chapter 1, the old major is the central figure, all other animals enter the barn at night and can talk about the revolution.
In George Orwell's novel "Zoo", these animals inherited the farm and created their own independent society. It happened during the Russian Revolution in 1917. George Orwell is a tension between tyranny classes and exploitative classes between sneaky ideals and the harsh reality of socialism. George Orwell's literary work clearly shows that these animals are "Mr. Jones" as they accepted this treatment.
George Orwell 's zoo' Zoo 'is the interpretation of George Orwell' s small scale Russian revolution, representing the Russian state using British farms. At the beginning of this book, animals are complaining about Mr. Jones who is the current farmer. Mr. Jones is the owner of a manor farm, a ranch where all animals live, and is representative of the Russian imperialist regime. The animals started talking about how to knock down Mr. Jones. The views expressed in their argument are similar to those of organizations and people who tried to overthrow the Russian alliance regime before the Russian revolution.