Animal Farm

30 posts1, 2

Have you read Animal Farm?

yes
40
77%
no
12
23%
 
Total votes : 52


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I'd been meaning to read it for years, but the politics seemed tedious especially when there was so much controversy about the “war against terrorism” on the tv. But finally, for my Modern History class, the teacher suggested we read Animal Farm because we were starting on the Russian Revolution (for those whom have not read it, that’s what the story was based on), and so i finished it in a few days (no not the same day, I know, pitiful considering how small it is).

What I want to know is how many people have actually read Animal Farm.

The politics in the book are extreme. It's very satirical and very cynical, they are just farm animals, and yet one sees such a resemblance to parts of human society. The most noticeable, of course, are the sheep, and the pigs. The pigs, on one end of the spectrum, are very controlling and devious, a lot like the upper-class, more educated of society, and the Sheep are the under-educated, willing to follow and not think for themselves-part of society. Unfortunately, they are the majority, the rest of the animals seem to have the intelligence, just not the education. Funny that.

I suggest if you have not read it, then do so (but don't turn into a cynical old hag)
"Meanwhile everyone wants to breathe and nobody can; and many say, 'We will breathe later.' And most of them don’t die because they are already dead." -- Graffiti of the events of May, Paris '68




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I've just read it and it's great.




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Orwellian political thinking isn't my cup of tea, per se. A lot of his predictions are extreme, and the only reason why any of them have survived is because of fanatic revolutionaries who propagate his ideas, but as they purport his political notions, they commit the actions he condemns.

However, I did, indeed, love the satirization in Animal Farm, but if anyone else had written it, I would have ripped it to shreds. The plot of the story was flimsy and the construction he used to set it up could have been better. It did, though, get its point across, and I can't fault him, really; after all, we're still reading it.
"If I have not seen as far as others, it is because giants were standing on my shoulders." -Hal Abelson




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Unbelievably, I didn't catch the politics on the first run through of it. I dont agree with a ton of it, but the book had me in hysterical laughter. I read it last year and really enjoyd it




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I read it in the fourth grade, so of course I didn't catch the fact that it was a political statement, not a story about a bunch of animals on a farm..lol...anyway, it's on my summer reading list, which is rapidly lengthening...I've bit a bit busy with Dante and Tolkien to start on anything else...
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"Most of us have far more courage than we ever dreamed we possessed."
- Dale Carnegie




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Right now I am reading it. It was a best seller in its time because it was realsed at the beginning of the cold war.So far I can see the politics in the book very easily. So far the book isn't the best book that I have ever read but its not the worst.
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I finished reading it a few weeks ago. It was really good, in my opinion, and it really helped me to understand what really occurred. I'm doing a project on it right now, so I've been rereading it.
Love and Light




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As you probably know, I like pigs. A lot. When I was in second grade, I was quite obsessive over them and said that they were the best species in the world, etc., etc. So, my mom, being a twisted lady, gave me "Animal Farm" when I was in second grade. And I read it. I became convinced that the pigs were quite evil, so my new motto was, "Pigs are the best, except the pigs in 'Animal Farm.'"

Did I mention I was a strange kid?

I didn't really think much of it at the time. I loved Boxer and I thought the pigs were evil. Oh, and windmills were bad ideas. That was what I got.

Anyway, when I was about 14, I realized that I had read it about 7 years ago and decided I needed to read it again. So I did.

It's creepy.

At first, it seems like everything is fine. The Old Major makes a speech, and it really is a good speech. It's about equality and togetherness, and though the writing is rather bare (it was purposely written like that) it is quite evident that the animals need this unity. After all, Farmer Jones is a drunk who doesn't care about them at all. So when they get the chance, using their force together, they kick Farmer Jones out. And then, lo! They are free!

Instantly the pigs set up command. After all, they are the intelligent ones and they can think quickly. They decide on a socialist system where each animal does the best he can. At first, everything is fine. The harvest is more, the animals are happy (they are free!) and everything is fine. But then there's the windmill.

And everything falls apart.

It's quite a tragic book, and I'm afraid to say I never quite finished reading it (mostly because I was in tears and threw the book down at the most emotional part of the book). But it is good. Very good. Written in a bare style, it is easily accessible, and even for those who are no aware of the historical aspects of the time, it is a good story and will leave you thinking.

But it's very sad...

10/10
Ubi caritas est vera, Deus ibi est.

"The mark of your ignorance is the depth of your belief in injustice and tragedy. What the caterpillar calls the end of the world, the Master calls the butterfly." ~ Richard Bach

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Believe me, I read it when I was 10. I just happened to come across it, and read it like any other book, like the children's classics. It was only afterwards that I came to know that it was a politics-based book. The character Boxer had seemed to me to be a childhood hero to me. So, for me I did not relate Animal Farm with politics but rather politics with Animal Farm. The 'Orwellian idea' did really appeal to me.
The Football Freak.




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I read it pretty recently. I really enjoyed it, and I did not like Boxer or the pigs. It made me cry, but I forgot which part. I saw the movie before it and the movie made me cry too(for the puppies). I like the book's ending better, even the the movie had a relatively happy one.
Adults are just obsolete children, and to hell with them!
-Dr.Suess

Deadpanners are backtalkers!

badonkadonk
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I too have come across a few people who have read this wonderful book.
I first came to know ‘bout it 4 years ago when my English teacher gave it as an example for the word allusion. “Animal Farm is an allusion to the Russian Revolution” she had said and ever since then I have been trying to get my hands on a copy.
I too read it only a month ago and the book left me thinking. Though it may seem to be a very childish book superficially, deep inside the skins of the animals lurk vicious human thoughts and philosophies.
Personally I like the horses Clover and Boxer. Clover represents that class of the society who understands what is going on but it unable to take any action. I can identify myself with her. Boxer is more like the sheep easily fooled by dreams and is ready to sacrifice life for the gold at the end of a non-existing rainbow.
The character of the donkey Muriel is pretty interesting. I think Muriel stand for the learned recluses of the society.
It was a shame to see Old Major’s Paradise being turned into hell for the animals.
But I do appreciate the determination of the animals. It was sheer determination that allowed them to re-re-construct the windmill.
I was very sad when Boxer was sold to the slaughterhouse in return of a crate of wine.
The last line “the creatures outside looked 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” is just too brilliant.
My favourite dialogue is however “ALL ANIMALS ARE EQUAL BUT SOME ANIMALS ARE MORE EQULA THAN OTHERS”
I also like the sheep’s dialogue “Four legs good two legs BETTER”
Did you know that Orwell was born in India and in my state – West Bengal.
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I like puppies.
Adults are just obsolete children, and to hell with them!
-Dr.Suess

Deadpanners are backtalkers!

badonkadonk
Atheism is a non phophet organisation




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The end was very moving I thought. A good, tragic book. Loved it.
Cuz I'm praying for rain and I'm praying for tidal waves.
I wanna see the ground give way. I wanna watch it all go down.




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I read it about a year ago for a sixth grade project. I absolutely loved it. I wrote my book report and discussed the political aspects of the book. When I did my presentation about it and read my report, the other kids in my class just kind of looked at me.

My teacher said, "Did you enjoy it?" I responded with, "Well, of course I did. I loved the way it was written, and the great political side of it."

Everyone just continued staring blankly at me, and my teacher tried yet again to make me answer a question the way she wanted me to. "It was kind of a funny and silly book, wasn't it?"

I said, "Well, no, not really. It can be described as humorous, but it wasn't nonsensical."

Needless to say, I was disappointed that the kids in my class were so annoyingly uninformed and unwilling to try to understand.
A single death is a tragedy; a million deaths is a statistic.
Joseph Stalin (1879 - 1953)




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Don't read this book, although it is interesting how george orwell connected the important people of the russian revolution to animals, it is over all a terrible book. We were forced to read it for ADV. World History this year, when we were studying the Russian Revolution. It was terrible, also the animal farm movie was terrible as well.
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