Tuesday, July 30, 2019
Napoleon and Snowball Essay
Napoleon and Snowball are characters who represent Stalin and Trotsky. Explore the conflict between these two characters presented by Orwell in Animal Farm ââ¬ËAnimal Farmââ¬â¢ is an allegory which presents George Orwellââ¬â¢s views on communism in the form of an anthropomorphic fable. The main characters are Snowball and Napoleon, who represent Trotsky and Stalin, are two opposing characters whose conflict is presented in a number of linguistic and structural ways. An example of this are the different ideas of ââ¬ËAnimalismââ¬â¢ which Snowball and Napoleon have. Snowball strives for equality whilst Napoleon becomes a power-driven dictator. One of the first differences that emerge between Snowball and Napoleon are their physical differences described at the start of Chapter 2 Napoleon is described as a ââ¬Ëlarge, rather fierce-lookingââ¬â¢ pig which foreshadows his future violent ways of dictatorship , as well as showing that Napoleon takes more than his fair sha re. On the other hand, Snowball seems to be a more suitable leader as he is ââ¬Ëquicker in speechââ¬â¢ and ââ¬Ëmore inventiveââ¬â¢. However, it appears as if Orwell is foreshadowing Snowballââ¬â¢s eventual inferiority by mentioning that he was not ââ¬Ëconsidered to have the same depth of characterââ¬â¢. In my opinion, throughout Chapter 2, Orwell is making the reader feel more inclines towards Snowball by presenting him as someone who strives for equality and seems to be on the animalsââ¬â¢ side. The main source of conflict between Snowball ad Napoleon, especially during the first half of the novel, was due to the fact that ââ¬Ëthese two were never in agreementââ¬â¢ and this is shown through the way they utilise (or manipulate, in Napoleonââ¬â¢s case) their power over the other animalsââ¬â¢. Snowball is full of plans and ideas, such as education and generating electricity which help optimise the animalsââ¬â¢ lives. We know that Snowball is driven to spread the word of ââ¬ËAnimalismââ¬â¢ by creating simplified maxims such as ââ¬Ëfour legs good, two legs badââ¬â¢. However, Orwell portrays the idea that a lot of these plans are idealistic as many of these fail and this becomes apparent when Orwell lists them but abruptly ends the list with the sentence ââ¬Ëon the whole these projects were a failureââ¬â¢, creating bathos and a satirical tone. On the other hand, Napoleon becomes a dictator whose only goals are to gain power for himself and the reader is aware of this when ââ¬Ëthe milk has disappearedââ¬â¢ at the end of Chapter 2- we later learn that this is mixed inà with the pigââ¬â¢s food. Napoleon ââ¬Ëtook no interest in Snowballsââ¬â¢ committeesââ¬â¢ and instead uses fear and his propaganda agent Squealer to gain dominance over the animals, showing that his idea of dictatorship is based more on fascism that the utopian vision of ââ¬ËAnimalismââ¬â¢. Squealer plants the idea in the animalsââ¬â¢ heads that if they do not follow Napoleon ââ¬ËJones will come backââ¬â¢. He also uses the dogs, which he took f rom their mothers when they were puppies and trained them to be guard dogs, as a fear element. The pigs are the most educated animals on the farm (probably due to Napoleon focusing on indoctrinating only the pigs) and use their higher skill level to position themselves above the other animals. Orwell portrays this by reminding the reader numerous times throughout the novel that the pigs were ââ¬Ëthe cleverest of the animalsââ¬â¢. Napoleon abuses this which is noticeable in Squealerââ¬â¢s speeches when he says that apples are ââ¬Ëabsolutely necessary to the well-being of a pigââ¬â¢ and using complicated languages to obfuscate the pigs. Eventually, Napoleon usurps dominance over the farm bad the animals start looking up to him, creating dangerous maxims such as ââ¬ËNapoleon is always rightââ¬â¢ and the sheepsââ¬â¢ bleating of ââ¬Ëfour legs good, two legs badââ¬â¢ used to drown out anyone who disagrees with Napoleon. ââ¬ËAnimal Farmââ¬â¢ mirrors the events of the Russian revolution and Orwellââ¬â¢s purpose is to show the reader that, althoug h it seems ideal in theory, communism is flawed. The reader can sense that this is satire because Orwell ridicules his targets by reducing political figures to the level of unflattering farm animals, especially pigs who are renowned for their greed and gluttony. Snowball represents Trotsky who was a brilliant leader. However, Napoleon attempts to expel Snowball form the farm, just like Stalin expels Trotsky. Napoleon then tries to eradicate Snowballââ¬â¢s name from victorious memories such as his triumph in the Battle of the Cowshed and make him into a traitor. He blames Snowball for the destruction of the windmill as well as spreading rumours that he is ââ¬Ësecretly frequenting the farm by nightââ¬â¢ and causing mischief. In my opinion, it is worrying how easily the animalsââ¬â¢ convinced, which shows just how powerful Napoleon is. Structure plays an important role in building tension and introducing conflict. Things seem to get worse with each chapter and the farm seems to rapidly descend into a fascist dystopia soon after Snowball is chased off the farm. There also seems to a few instances of irony created by Orwellââ¬â¢s juxtaposition-à for example, he tells the reader that the animals suffer ââ¬Ëhardshipsââ¬â¢ but that they also have a ââ¬Ëgreater dignityââ¬â¢. This portrays the ignorance of the animals, as well as conveying Orwellââ¬â¢s mocking tone. This mocking tone is found in various pleas throughout the novel to emphasise how oblivious the animals are to the despotic nature of Napoleon. For example, Squealer is found obviously changing the commandments but ââ¬Ënone of the animals could form any idea as to what this meantââ¬â¢ which not only shows oblivion but due to the fact the blindly accept everything Napoleon says, they cannot think for themselves.
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