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BS: Animal Farm- Meaning?

20 Mar 07 - 07:33 PM (#2002625)
Subject: BS: Animal Farm- Meaning?
From: Ebbie

I'm housebound today so I watched Animal Farm for the first time in many years and discovered that I don't understand it at all.

I realize that it's a political statement, along the lines, one might say, of Lord of the Flies, but who is what and just what is the message? Man is a corrupt tyrant, OK. The animals are a citizenry that rise up against the ruling body. They then, in turn, also become lazy, self-indulgent, greedy and corrupt. What else?

The ending- that's the part that is so ambiguous that I don't grasp it at all. The new people driving up to the Farm? A new beginning? What's going on?

It's been years since the rebels went into hiding, but although they are old they are still alive. Why then is everybody at the Farm dead? There is that image of the dead pig in the mud- was everyone else so underfed and abused that they died? I can see why Napoleon died; he had become alcoholic, but what about the others?

As you can surmise, I'm such a literal-minded person that I have great difficulty with nuance and intimation. I'm sure this film (not to mention the book) has been discussed and dissected in schools everywhere. But I wasn't there.

Any thoughts on this? Anything to pass on to me to ease my mind?


20 Mar 07 - 07:35 PM (#2002626)
Subject: RE: BS: Animal Farm- Meaning?
From: Peace

Orwell's condemnation of the USSR.


20 Mar 07 - 07:42 PM (#2002632)
Subject: RE: BS: Animal Farm- Meaning?
From: Ebbie

OK but can you break it down for me?

The movement that became the USSR rose up against the corrupt monarchy and then became worse than what they had rebelled against? What about the vignettes within?


20 Mar 07 - 07:46 PM (#2002634)
Subject: RE: BS: Animal Farm- Meaning?
From: GUEST,.gargoyle

Go to your local bookstore and purchase the "Cliff Notes" it will spell it all out for you. If you have a modicum of understanding, regarding the 20th century, it will be fabulous fun - satire at its best - lots and lots of irony.

Sincerely,
Gargoyle


20 Mar 07 - 07:51 PM (#2002637)
Subject: RE: BS: Animal Farm- Meaning?
From: bobad

Animal Farm
(snobby version)
By George Orwell
Ultra-Condensed by Samuel Stoddard and David J. Parker


Old Major, the Pig

    Let us overthrow the depraved czar, Farmer Jones, a symbol of a feudalist government that falls into moral ruin by its own excess and corruption. (dies)

Napoleon, the Pig

    Yes, let us indeed overthrow the human oligarchy as Karl Ma--uh, Friedrich Enge--uh, Wladimir Iljitsch Leni--uh, Old Major said.

Snowball, the Pig

    Yes. I'll lead the defense, unwary that you, like the other Napoleon, are pulling a strategic Stalinesque maneuver by using our revolution as a means to set up your own cruel totalitarian empire. I'm a regular Leo Dawidowitsch Trotzky!

(Napoleon sicks his pack of secret police dogs on Snowball, and they EXILE him.)

Sheep

    See how easily we, the blind followers of our leaders, ignore the facts and are swayed into loyalty by the pushing of emotional buttons? Four legs good. Two legs baaaad.

Rats and Rabbits

    Can we, the Menscheviki, be comrades too?

Moses, the Raven

    Take comfort in what I, a symbol of the Orthodox Church, say. When you die, you'll go to the glorious Sugarcandy Mountain. So there's no need for revolution after all.

Squealer, the Pig

    Go away, opiate of the people. Like Goebbels, the German minister of propaganda, I have a much greater hold on the people than you do.

Pigeons

    Let's be the message carriers of communism and spread the doctrine of the revolution far beyond the physical boundaries of our regime.

Boxer, the Horse

    Napoleon is always right. Like the Russian working class, I am convinced of the necessity of our revolution, firmly devoted to its cause, and work hard for my leaders.

Napoleon, the Pig

    Good horse, Boxer. We need more animals like you.

Boxer, the Horse

    I'm old now. At long last, I have reached retirement age. Now I can rest peacefully while Napoleon takes care of me.

Napoleon, the Pig

    Think again, you lazy oaf. (sells Boxer for glue)

(The animals destroy the windmill in an action symbolic of the failure of the Five Year Economic Plan. Then the pigs turn into humans. Thus ends this dystopian fable on totalitarianism.)



THE END


20 Mar 07 - 07:51 PM (#2002638)
Subject: RE: BS: Animal Farm- Meaning?
From: Peace

Some of it is straight-forward. It addresses the time from about 1917-1940s in the USSR. Changing political system. Emergence of a classless society in which some are more equal than others. Two legs good, four legs bad, and the animals that come to rule the roost (the pigs) walk on two legs. The gradual changing of slogans--much in line with Orwell's way of thinking that developed to its maximum in "1984". Orwell had participated in Empier as a police officer in Burma (?), and I suspect much of what he learned/saw there was a later response to the effects of colonialism. However, I am not all that up on Orwell, so best I shush and let those who are more fully address the questions you have.


20 Mar 07 - 07:51 PM (#2002639)
Subject: RE: BS: Animal Farm- Meaning?
From: Bobert

The bottom line of "Animal Farm" is don't try to do better, don't rock the boat, don't bother thinkin' that things can ever be better..."Meet the new boss, same as the old boss"...

Okay, I've never seent he movie and so I'm probably a million miles off but I've read the book and if the movie is anything like the book then that's whaty it's about...

Okay, there tons of symbols in the book... The horse ar the "true belivers" and end up working themselves to death in the name of the movement... The pigs are, ahhh. the new bosses and everyone else is just everyone else...

I hated this book even though I couldn't put it down...

I still hate this book because it says there is no hope for change...

But I haven't seen the movie...

...but the themes of the book are very depressing...

Bobert


20 Mar 07 - 07:52 PM (#2002640)
Subject: RE: BS: Animal Farm- Meaning?
From: Peace

OK. Bobad's got the quintessential explanation. Sorry to have cross-posted with you, bobad.


20 Mar 07 - 07:55 PM (#2002642)
Subject: RE: BS: Animal Farm- Meaning?
From: Peace

The movie is graet. It handles the book well. Worth watching, Bobert. (It's a cartoon, but doene with the 'class' of "Charlotte's Web" or "Watership Down.")


20 Mar 07 - 07:59 PM (#2002646)
Subject: RE: BS: Animal Farm- Meaning?
From: GUEST,.gargoyle

Sincerely - purchase a study guide TONIGHT - if you are serious about UNDERSTANDING you WILL have fun if your IQ runs, even a hair, above 85.

Gargoyle


20 Mar 07 - 08:05 PM (#2002649)
Subject: RE: BS: Animal Farm- Meaning?
From: Ebbie

Maybe just a hair, gargoyle.


20 Mar 07 - 08:08 PM (#2002652)
Subject: RE: BS: Animal Farm- Meaning?
From: Peace

I have 85 hairs. That's about all, though.


20 Mar 07 - 09:11 PM (#2002692)
Subject: RE: BS: Animal Farm- Meaning?
From: Joe_F

I believe that more than one movie has been made from the book, so you may not all be discussing the same one. As to the book, however, it is (like Nineteen Eighty-Four) a satire, written with a political purpose: to debunk Stalinism. Orwell was a socialist, and believed that if socialism was to have any chance of success, the first requirement was to dissociate it from what had happened in Russia. Animal Farm is a pretty faithful allegory of the fate of the Russian revolution. (Orwell even made a last-minute change in wording in order to be fair to Napoleon-Stalin.) Nineteen Eighty-Four is a more complicated satire, with the warning "It can happen here too, if we turn socialism into a religion".

ObSongs: In the movie version I saw, "Beasts of England" was charmingly rendered as a chorus of animal sounds.


21 Mar 07 - 12:02 AM (#2002781)
Subject: RE: BS: Animal Farm- Meaning?
From: Stilly River Sage

Go to the source, read the book. Here it is. The movie, whatever and whichever it is, is a different work, it is, by definition, a mediated version of the original. I haven't seen the movie, but this is what happens when a work of art is interpreted and moved into a new form.

Animal Farm has a lot of currency today. It may have started in the period and the subject matter suggested above, but if you read the story, you'll see a great deal that has application now. And that's the sign of a good book.

SRS, MA, English, 1999.


21 Mar 07 - 12:39 AM (#2002793)
Subject: RE: BS: Animal Farm- Meaning?
From: GUEST,michaelr

Pink Floyd's "Animals" makes it even clearer: Pigs run the show, dogs do the dirty work for them, sheep are led to the slaughter.

Couldn't be perfecter.

Cheers,
Michael


21 Mar 07 - 02:03 AM (#2002812)
Subject: RE: BS: Animal Farm- Meaning?
From: Richard Bridge

If you are discussing the classic cartoon - the John Halas and Joy Batchelor film, produced by de Rochemont Films, bear in mind when considering whether it faithfully replicates the meaning of the Goerge Orwell book, that is now proven that it was substantially funded by the CIA as anti-soviet propaganda.

Enquiries as to US rights should be directed to Shaler McReel at the current de Rochemont corporation called de Rochemont Films Inc.

Enquiries as to non-US rights should be directed to Joe D'Morais, at Blue Dolphin Films Ltd, London, who AFAIK still represent the Halas and Batchelor Collection Ltd.

There is a research archive on Halas and Batchelor material generally at an academic institution in Surrey but Shaler McReel has a quantity of Animal Farm-specific material.


21 Mar 07 - 03:45 AM (#2002846)
Subject: RE: BS: Animal Farm- Meaning?
From: GUEST,Ian cookieless

Bobert, it is not true at all that "The bottom line of "Animal Farm" is don't try to do better, don't rock the boat, don't bother thinkin' that things can ever be better..."Meet the new boss, same as the old boss"..." George Orwell was very much a man of the left, but he was not a blind ideologist. These types he severely criticised (especially after his experiences in the Spanish civil war). And he certainly was no political conservative or surrenderer in the face of brutality, as you suggest. In other words, he would never give his critical faculties over to any party or any abstract idea: everything has to be critiqued in the light of experience; experience should never be twisted to suit the party line. That is the punch line of 'Animal Farm' and also the theme of '1984'.


21 Mar 07 - 04:07 AM (#2002855)
Subject: RE: BS: Animal Farm- Meaning?
From: John O'L

If you'd been sensible and watched Pirates of the Caribean or something you wouldn't have had to upset yourself wondering about meanings and stuff, but oh no, you had to go and do something cerebral.
Ah, me.
Free time is wasted on the intelligent.


21 Mar 07 - 09:48 AM (#2003013)
Subject: RE: BS: Animal Farm- Meaning?
From: The Fooles Troupe

Ebbie

the key is the bit in the book (and done visually in the animation) that goes 'the animals looked from the pigs to the men and back, and could see no difference'...


21 Mar 07 - 09:56 AM (#2003021)
Subject: RE: BS: Animal Farm- Meaning?
From: MMario

the underlying message is "power corrupts"


21 Mar 07 - 10:00 AM (#2003026)
Subject: RE: BS: Animal Farm- Meaning?
From: Peace

and absolute power corrupts absolutely.


21 Mar 07 - 10:04 AM (#2003029)
Subject: RE: BS: Animal Farm- Meaning?
From: The Fooles Troupe

Power corrupts, absolute power corrupts absolutely.


21 Mar 07 - 10:08 AM (#2003034)
Subject: RE: BS: Animal Farm- Meaning?
From: Scrump

Well said Foolestroupe.


21 Mar 07 - 10:29 AM (#2003058)
Subject: RE: BS: Animal Farm- Meaning?
From: The Fooles Troupe

Somebody will come along sooner or later and quote the original source...


21 Mar 07 - 11:04 AM (#2003099)
Subject: RE: BS: Animal Farm- Meaning?
From: Stilly River Sage

Lord Acton (though it is often attributed to Marx).

Read the book. I posted a link to the full text.

All things being equal, some things a more equal than others. :)


21 Mar 07 - 11:16 AM (#2003120)
Subject: RE: BS: Animal Farm- Meaning?
From: mack/misophist

An even better quote from SRS's link:

"Men cannot be made good by the state, but they can easily be made bad." — Lord Acton


21 Mar 07 - 11:17 AM (#2003123)
Subject: RE: BS: Animal Farm- Meaning?
From: GUEST

Maybe I'm dense, bit I never really thought of Lod of The Flies as political book. Did I miss something ?


21 Mar 07 - 11:19 AM (#2003126)
Subject: RE: BS: Animal Farm- Meaning?
From: Peace

Not in my opinion.


21 Mar 07 - 11:21 AM (#2003131)
Subject: RE: BS: Animal Farm- Meaning?
From: Ebbie

I'm the one who mentioned Lord of the Flies, Guest, and I meant it only as another book that deals with the human condition.


21 Mar 07 - 11:23 AM (#2003136)
Subject: RE: BS: Animal Farm- Meaning?
From: GUEST,meself

A story of a fledgling democracy being overthrown by a type of primitive fascism political? Naw.


21 Mar 07 - 11:31 AM (#2003145)
Subject: RE: BS: Animal Farm- Meaning?
From: Tinker

Pink Monkey

cliffsnotes

You don't even have to leave home to get the analysis any more. The cliffsnote link seems to address your question the best Ebbie. It seems the movie might have left out a few critical pieces of information....

tinker


21 Mar 07 - 06:55 PM (#2003573)
Subject: RE: BS: Animal Farm- Meaning?
From: Peace

"A story of a fledgling democracy being overthrown by a type of primitive fascism political? Naw. "

I agree with that, memyself. Just that I do not at all care for the book. And that's after over six readings. Blahhhhhhhhhhhhhh . . . .


22 Mar 07 - 01:40 AM (#2003788)
Subject: RE: BS: Animal Farm- Meaning?
From: JohnInKansas

Maybe I'm dense, bit I never really thought of Lod of The Flies as political book. Did I miss something ?

The "Wizard of Oz" was an intensely bitter political book until Hollywood got a grip on it.

John


22 Mar 07 - 03:41 PM (#2004300)
Subject: RE: BS: Animal Farm- Meaning?
From: An Buachaill Caol Dubh

A couple of thoughts occurred to me in reading the original post; several of these having also occurred to others, I add only this: Orwell got the idea of setting his allegory/satire on a farm from a specific incident (presumably the idea of which animals would best represent different "Types" of Humanity and/or different factions/groups in the specific Russian setting came to him pretty quickly too). The incident? He saw a young farm-boy, on foot, "driving" a great Clydesdale cart-horse down a country lane; the boy wasn't beating the horse, just waving a stick as an "encouragement", or threat, and the poor brute was rolling its eyes in fear. Orwell recognised that the horse could have crushed the youth instantly, but it had learned fear, obedience, "I will work harder" as Boxer puts it. "Working people of all nations, unite..."; at least it will be a while before you can't tell the New Boss-Class from the Old, and maybe one day the Revolution will break out of the usual pattern. But then, we come back to "Types" of Humanity.


22 Mar 07 - 03:49 PM (#2004306)
Subject: RE: BS: Animal Farm- Meaning?
From: Little Hawk

I don't like the original book much either, Peace. It's a real downer. But it does make some good points.

We need a new George Orwell to write a new satirical book of this sort on the misuses of corporate power and mass marketing.


22 Mar 07 - 04:54 PM (#2004345)
Subject: RE: BS: Animal Farm- Meaning?
From: Peace

"We need a new George Orwell to write a new satirical book of this sort on the misuses of corporate power and mass marketing."

They write for the Wall Street Journal!


23 Mar 07 - 02:31 AM (#2004671)
Subject: RE: BS: Animal Farm- Meaning?
From: The Fooles Troupe

Aren't there some books on 'the Corporate Wars'?


23 Mar 07 - 10:30 AM (#2004994)
Subject: RE: BS: Animal Farm- Meaning?
From: Stilly River Sage

There was a little Alan J. Pakula flick that made an impression, from over 25 years ago. I just looked it up--Rollover. I'd have to watch it again today to see if it still has the clout it did back then. It was sort of a China Syndrome for the world financial situation.

SRS


24 Mar 07 - 07:59 AM (#2005711)
Subject: RE: BS: Animal Farm- Meaning?
From: The Fooles Troupe

I read one recently - can't remember title or author - that was noe more than about 10 years old - in which the clever plot was to destroy the world banking system.


24 Mar 07 - 08:43 AM (#2005735)
Subject: RE: BS: Animal Farm- Meaning?
From: Big Al Whittle

You can apply it to any political situation, but it wasn't really about Russia, more than anywhere else. Could have been written about the power brokers in UK folk scene. (The Hooray Henries of the traddy scene whoop it up globetrotting round the various folk festivals of the world, whilst the sexy young contemporary singers who spearhead the music revolution - filling the folkclubs in the 1960's, die prematurely having been driven into exile!)

Orwell had just come back from the Spanish Civil war and his narrative directly addressed his experiences there.

He had been involved with a republican militia called POUM, who like Snowball's followers, were done for by people who had been their comrades. The skilful storytelling of how self interest is pursued by the pigs under the guise of idealism, are what make Animal Farm a great human document.


24 Mar 07 - 10:04 AM (#2005791)
Subject: RE: BS: Animal Farm- Meaning?
From: GUEST,meself

"it wasn't really about Russia, more than anywhere else" -

While I agree with the gist of your post, I think it's quite clear that Orwell WAS thinking of the Russian experience in particular, but of course he chose a form (allegory) that makes the story more widely applicable.


24 Mar 07 - 10:57 AM (#2005823)
Subject: RE: BS: Animal Farm- Meaning?
From: Big Al Whittle

I always used to think so - but apparently in his mind, it was about Spain rather than Russia.

A lot of people thought it was about Russia though, and it was given a low key publication, because the Russians were our allies at the time. It was the war. It received a bit of a mauling from the left wing press - fair enough I suppose - 20 million Russian dead - it was hardly a time to start making veiled insults.


24 Mar 07 - 06:54 PM (#2006180)
Subject: RE: BS: Animal Farm- Meaning?
From: Bill Hahn//\\

A film can rarely capture the true meaning of a book. One loses, usually, the nuances and the pictures that only your own mind can conjure up.

I have seen both the film (years ago) and read the book (years ago). The film, as I recall was a great disappointment after having read the book. The same for 1984. Why can no one capture 1984, Winston, Big Brother, and all the meaning---it turns into what later became an Isomething or other commercial and, of course, never forget the terror part in the room all fear. Better in the book.

Bill Hahn


31 Aug 25 - 10:07 AM (#4227867)
Subject: RE: BS: Animal Farm- Meaning?
From: FreddyHeadey

The Farmer's Guide to Animal Farm
Artworks - BBC Radio 4 - August 2025
,,, to mark its anniversary writer and academic Lisa Mullen seeks out a new perspective by asking, what if we read it as a book about farming instead? As Lisa travels from the rich sandy loam of East Anglia to the hill farms of the Cotswolds, George Orwell emerges as a man committed to life as a smallholder, and as a writer deeply involved in the agricultural debates of the 20th century – debates that have shaped the English countryside as it is today.

With contributors Nathan Waddell, Professor of 20th Century Literature at the University of Birmingham and author of A Bright Cold Day: The Wonder of George Orwell; Ian Wilkinson, co-founder and director of FarmED; Melissa Abbot, Growing Officer at the Food Museum, Stowmarket; Dr Ollie Douglas, Curator at the Museum of English Rural life in Reading; Dr Sophie Scott Brown, Fellow of the Institute of Intellectual History at the University of St Andrews and author of The Radical Fifties: Activist Politics in Cold War Britain
www.bbc.co.uk/programmes/m002hkpw


01 Sep 25 - 01:22 AM (#4227904)
Subject: RE: BS: Animal Farm- Meaning?
From: Pappy Fiddle

Everybody left out the key element. The donkey understood it all and did nothing.


01 Sep 25 - 02:47 PM (#4227924)
Subject: RE: BS: Animal Farm- Meaning?
From: robomatic

In Alaska a couple of years ago we voted to modify our voting: It’s called Ranked Choice Voting We are apparently the second State to do this after Maine, a fine State. I think it was a neat feat of democracy, a modification that was instituted in a democracy in the hope of making that democracy more better. It allowed the election in a single public vote, of a moderate Republcican with both guts and a briain. (And a vagina, FYI).
Since that election, there has been a movement to rescind that method of voting by, of course, the TRMPst right wing. It is presented as too complicated. There was a counter advert that showed kids clearly explaining the system. The succeeding vote just barely confirmed it. There will doubtless be another challenge.
Orwell’s Animal Farm was an attempt to explain some recent history maybe to kids but not ONLY to kids. And to put issues inteo a frame of discussion that would keep things, as Einstein would put it: “As simple as possible, but not simpler.”


04 Sep 25 - 11:35 AM (#4228049)
Subject: RE: BS: Animal Farm- Meaning?
From: MaJoC the Filk

For a bit of context: Herself's (Penguin) copy of Animal Farm has an advert at the end for Homage to Catalonia, about Orwell's experiences in the Spanish Civil War:

.... In feeling --- and almost in the outline of events --- these embittered chapters of autobiography foreshadow Orwell's masterpiece of satire, Animal Farm. [...]

It is with a sense of anger that one reads how an idealistic English volunteer, gravely wonded at the front, is at length forced into hiding and flight as Communists, Anarchists, and near-Trotskyites settle their differences in the streets of Barcelona.