George Orwell's
Animal Farm:
A Comprehensive Analysis
A story about farm animals overthrowing their farmer. A devastating portrait of the Russian Revolution, Stalinism, and the eternal cycle by which the oppressed become the oppressors.
- Whatever goes upon two legs is an enemy.
- Whatever goes upon four legs, or has wings, is a friend.
- No animal shall wear clothes.
- No animal shall sleep in a bed.
- No animal shall drink alcohol.
- No animal shall kill any other animal.
- All animals are equal.
- ...but some are more equal than others.
On the surface, Animal Farm is a children's story about animals running a farm. Beneath it is one of the most precise and savage political satires ever written — a compressed, almost geometrically perfect account of how revolutions fail, how ideals are corrupted, and how the powerful rewrite reality to preserve their power. Published in 1945 after being rejected by multiple publishers unwilling to offend a wartime Soviet ally, it has never been out of print.
The Allegorical Foundation
Animal Farm is a point-for-point allegory of the Russian Revolution of 1917 and the subsequent rise of Stalinist totalitarianism in the Soviet Union — rendered with such precision that its historical correspondences function almost as a key, mapping character to historical figure and event to event with uncommon fidelity.
The farm itself represents Russia and the broader Soviet Union. The drunken, negligent farmer Mr. Jones stands for Tsar Nicholas II — an incompetent ruler whose failures created the conditions for revolt. The animals' rebellion mirrors the October Revolution of 1917, when Bolshevik forces overthrew the provisional government. The pigs' gradual consolidation of power over the following years maps onto the Bolshevik seizure of state authority, the civil war, and Stalin's elimination of rivals after Lenin's death.
But Orwell is careful to frame the allegory as more than a historical case study. The subtitle — A Fairy Story — signals that the tale is also timeless: a template for how revolutions fail, applicable wherever they occur, not only in Russia in 1917.
Plot Structure: The Arc of Betrayal
The novella's power is inseparable from the ruthless simplicity of its structure. Orwell gives us a complete arc in fewer than 100 pages — from oppression through revolution through the restoration of an oppression worse than the original.
The story opens with Old Major — an aged, prize-winning boar — gathering the animals to share a dream: a world without human oppressors, where animals live freely and equally. He dies shortly after, but his vision, codified into the ideology of Animalism and its Seven Commandments, outlives him. The animals revolt, drive out Mr. Jones, and rename the property Animal Farm.
What follows is the novel's quiet, devastating centrepiece: the slow erosion of every principle the revolution established. The pigs, positioned as the most intelligent animals, assume leadership roles. Napoleon — the novel's central villain — expels his rival Snowball using a pack of dogs he has secretly trained as a private army, and from that point rules by terror and propaganda. The Seven Commandments are altered, one by one, in the night. Animals who question the changes are told they are misremembering. Those who resist are executed.
The climax arrives when the working horse Boxer — the most loyal, most hardworking, most trusting of all the animals — collapses from exhaustion. Rather than honouring his service, Napoleon sells him to a knacker's yard. The other animals are told he died in hospital, receiving the best possible care.
Key Characters and Their Real-World Counterparts
Orwell's characterisation is one of the novella's great achievements — each animal is simultaneously a fully realised figure within the fable and a recognisable historical or social type. The correspondences are precise without being reductive.
| Character | Real-World Counterpart | Role in the Allegory |
|---|---|---|
| Old Major | Karl Marx / Lenin | Provides the revolutionary vision; dies before seeing how it is betrayed. His idealism is genuine but unable to protect itself. |
| Napoleon | Joseph Stalin | Seizes power through cunning and violence rather than intellect or principle; uses secret police, show trials, and propaganda. Never a visionary — always a tactician of power. |
| Snowball | Leon Trotsky | The genuine intellectual of the revolution — innovative, idealistic, and outmanoeuvred. Exiled and thereafter blamed for every failure, becoming the regime's permanent scapegoat. |
| Squealer | Soviet propaganda apparatus / Pravda | The regime's mouthpiece: twists language, rewrites history, exploits the other animals' poor memories, and makes each new injustice seem not only reasonable but inevitable. |
| Boxer | The Soviet working class | Magnificent in strength and loyalty; ultimately fatal in his credulity. His two mottos — "I will work harder" and "Napoleon is always right" — are Orwell's indictment of uncritical deference to authority. |
| Mr. Jones | Tsar Nicholas II | The original oppressor — incompetent, neglectful, and ultimately not the worst fate that awaits the animals. His return is feared; yet by the novel's end, the pigs have become worse. |
| The Dogs | The NKVD / secret police | Napoleon's private enforcers, raised from puppies in his service. They execute dissenters and silence opposition, operating outside any collective accountability. |
| Benjamin (the donkey) | Cynical intelligentsia | Knows that things are wrong and always have been, but refuses to act on that knowledge. His cynicism, Orwell implies, is as complicit as the others' naivety. |
The Corruption of Power
The novella's central moral is stated not by Orwell but by the historian Lord Acton, whose axiom the book dramatises with clinical precision: "Power tends to corrupt, and absolute power corrupts absolutely." The pigs do not begin the revolution as hypocrites. Old Major's dream is presented as genuinely felt; the early pigs — including Napoleon — appear to share the collective project. What changes them is not character but circumstance: the possession of power, and the discovery of what it enables.
This is crucial to the novella's argument. Orwell is not saying that revolutions are led by cynics who always intended to exploit their comrades. He is saying something more disturbing: that the structural logic of power — unchecked, unaccountable, self-perpetuating — produces tyranny even from those who began as genuine idealists. The mechanism is the same regardless of the individuals involved. Whoever occupies the position of absolute power will eventually use it absolutely.
"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."
— Final lines of Animal Farm
The Betrayal of Revolutionary Ideals
The Seven Commandments are the revolution's founding charter — its constitution, its moral code, and its promise. Their progressive alteration is the story of the novella told in miniature. Each rewriting is initially a small adjustment: a caveat here, a qualifying clause there. Each is explained by Squealer as either a necessary adaptation to circumstances or a correction of the animals' imperfect memory. The cumulative effect is total.
The final amendment — "but some animals are more equal than others" — is among the most devastating sentences in political literature. It does not merely expose hypocrisy; it reveals the ultimate destination of every ideology that promises equality but delivers hierarchy. The sentence is logically absurd, but it captures a political truth: those in power will always find language to make their privilege seem not only natural but principled.
Propaganda and Language as Tools of Control
Squealer is one of Orwell's most precisely observed creations — the propagandist as character type. He does not merely lie. He deploys a sophisticated repertoire of rhetorical techniques: appeal to statistics the animals cannot verify, invocation of the threat of Jones's return to silence any criticism, exploitation of the animals' poor collective memory, and gradual revision of what was "originally" agreed.
The animals' inability to remember the original Commandments accurately — and their willingness to defer to Squealer's version when their own recollection conflicts with his — is Orwell's portrait of how propaganda works in practice. It does not require that people believe falsehoods enthusiastically. It requires only that they lack the tools, the evidence, or the confidence to contradict them.
This theme connects directly to 1984: Newspeak in that novel is a more developed version of what Squealer practices in this one — the weaponisation of language to constrain thought and foreclose the expression of inconvenient truths. The reduction of Animalism's Seven Commandments to a single wall-painted slogan is an early prototype of the Ministry of Truth's work.
Class Stratification and Exploitation
One of the novella's sharpest ironies is structural: the revolution against human class hierarchy produces, within a few years, an animal class hierarchy just as rigid and just as exploitative. The pigs occupy the farmhouse, eat better food, exempt themselves from physical labour, and eventually walk on two legs — the very characteristic that originally defined the enemy. The dogs enforce the new order with the same violence used by any ruling class to maintain its position. The other animals — and especially Boxer — work harder than they ever did under Jones and receive less in return.
Boxer's fate is the novella's moral centre of gravity. He is the embodiment of honest, uncomplaining productive labour — the quality that every ruling class celebrates in the working class while ensuring that it never accumulates to the point of power. When he is no longer useful, he is sold. His fellow animals cannot save him, partly because they are too powerless and partly because they are too conditioned to believe Napoleon would not do such a thing. His last act, reportedly, is to express regret that he could not work harder.
Major Symbols
Snowball proposes the windmill as a genuine technological improvement that would reduce the animals' labour. Napoleon opposes it, then after Snowball's expulsion claims it as his own idea. The windmill is built, destroyed, and rebuilt — consuming enormous effort while producing no improvement in the animals' lives. It represents the grandiose industrialisation projects of Soviet central planning: promoted as progress for the workers, built on their exploitation, and benefiting primarily those in power.
Old Major's revolutionary anthem — sung with genuine feeling at the rebellion's outset — is eventually banned by Napoleon, who declares that the revolution is complete and therefore songs of future liberation are no longer appropriate. The prohibition marks the moment the revolution officially ends: not with liberation achieved, but with hope declared redundant by those who have seized its name.
The Commandments function simultaneously as constitution, moral code, and measuring stick. Their progressive rewriting is the story of the book's central argument made visible: that those in power will always modify the rules to suit their interests, and will always find ways to make those modifications seem legitimate.
The farm's renaming from Manor Farm to Animal Farm marked the revolution's birth. The restoration of the name Manor Farm in the novel's final pages marks its death — a formal declaration that the revolution has been fully reversed, and that the animals are now governed by creatures as indistinguishable from their original oppressors as it is possible to be.
The Ending and Its Bleak Message
The final scene of Animal Farm is one of the most carefully constructed in English fiction. The animals peer through the farmhouse window to see the pigs — now walking on two legs, wearing human clothes — seated at a card table with the neighbouring human farmers. Napoleon and Mr. Pilkington toast each other. A dispute breaks out over cheating at cards, and the watching animals find they can no longer tell the pigs from the men.
The image is precise and total. The pigs have not merely adopted some human characteristics while retaining their animal identity. They have become, functionally and visibly, their former oppressors. The revolution has not been corrupted — it has been reversed. The animals are back where they started, with the additional cruelty that the new masters were once their comrades, and that the ideology they used to seize power was one they had sincerely shared.
Orwell offers no hope here, and no path of escape. The animals outside the window are passive observers of their own betrayal — too conditioned, too exhausted, too lacking in collective memory or organisation to act. Benjamin the donkey, who always knew and never acted, reads the wall: the single surviving rule is the one that makes all others meaningless.
Legacy and Relevance
Animal Farm was rejected by multiple publishers before its 1945 publication — including by Victor Gollancz, the Left Book Club, and, most famously, by a reader at Jonathan Cape who had sought advice from the British Ministry of Information, which found the book politically inadvisable given the wartime alliance with the Soviet Union. T.S. Eliot, writing for Faber and Faber, called it too Trotskyite. The irony of a satire about the suppression of free thought being suppressed was not lost on Orwell.
Animal Farm and 1984 together constitute the most important political literary legacy of the twentieth century. Where 1984 is dense, claustrophobic, and conceptually complex, Animal Farm achieves its critique through deceptive simplicity — a fable legible to any literate reader, devastating to any thoughtful one.
Its most famous line — "All animals are equal, but some animals are more equal than others" — has become shorthand for the hypocrisy of any system that promises equality while delivering hierarchy. It is quoted in political debates, court judgments, academic papers, and protest signs across dozens of languages. It has attached itself permanently to the English language as the most economical expression of a specific and recurring human failure.
The novella is taught in schools across the world, often as students' first encounter with political allegory and the idea that fiction can be an instrument of political argument. Its relevance has never been confined to the Soviet Union. Every generation finds in it the regime it is most concerned about — because the pattern Orwell describes is not historical but structural: the seizure of a revolution's language by those who will use it to suppress the revolution's aims.
Orwell's warning is simple and permanent: power must be checked, ideals must be defended rather than merely proclaimed, and the moment a leader becomes unaccountable, the revolution — whatever it was called — is already over.
The animals had assumed equality would protect them. It did not. It never does on its own. "All animals are equal" — until someone rewrites the wall in the night, and by morning everyone has forgotten what it used to say.
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