Old Major- Karl Marx/ Lenin
Napoleon- Stalin(a horrible leader of russia who was the cause of millions of death and starved many. He was almost as bad as Hitler)
Snowball- Trosky( he ran against Stalin in the elections and Lenin, the previous leader, had wanted Trosky to take over after him. He was a communist and a much better man than Stalin and Stalin new that so he later exiled him. When he realized that wasn't enough he had him killed)
mollie- the rich of Russia who were fine with there previous lives
Boxer- the working class
Moses- The Russian orthadox churches that had once been shut down during the reign of Stalin. The churches came back soon after World War 2 began
Benjamin- George Orwell or the people of Russia that didn't care much of communism because they knew it wouldn't change the greedy way of humans.
the puppies- Stalin's secret police also known as the Checka.
Manor farm- russia
Squealer- Stalin's informer
There are many other symboli meanings in the story like the surrounding farms. You should really researh this online to find out more.
Mr Jones- Tsar Nicholas
Animal Farm portrays the Russian Revolution with each pig as a leader from the revolution.
it more represents the Russian revolution with the take over of communissm. the authour was not a big fan of it.
Animal farm is an allegory because a lot of things in the book represent things that really happened. For example, the raven Moses represented religion, which in real life Russia was trying to get rid of.
From Shmoop Literature on Symbols and Allegory in Animal Farmhttp://www.shmoop.com/literary-device/literature/george-orwell/animal-farm/symbols-imagery-allegory.htmlSo the "canonical interpretation" of Animal Farm is that it is a parable of the Russian Revolution of the twentieth century. Orwell created each animal to represent either a person or a class of people, and many of the events (e.g., the windmill stuff) parallel actual events in history. The following are generally accepted notions:
One each, one for each animal.
Depends on the animal because each farm animal has different types of parasites that could affect it.
It was based on the Russian Revolution in 1917. If you look up Animal Farm parallels, then you will see how each character or symbol in the novel represents something related to the revolution.
Ask your vet. They will know what each animal needs in each situation.
They each take on traits pertaining to the best and worst aspects of humanity.
The peacock was available in the animal crates that were available in the market for 20 Farm Cash. The animal crates were available in January, and again in March for about a week each time. Other animal possibilities from the crates were: buffalo, ox, jackalope, and deer.
"Old MacDonald Had a Farm" is typically sung as a repetitive children's song where each verse introduces a new animal sound. You can start by singing the first verse ("Old MacDonald had a farm, E-I-E-I-O") and then choose an animal and make its corresponding sound (for example, "And on that farm he had a cow, E-I-E-I-O, with a moo moo here and a moo moo there, here a moo, there a moo, everywhere a moo moo"). Repeat this pattern for each animal you want to include.
The animals see the pigs socializing with the humans. They're playing games (of some trade), eating, and toasting to each other on how they run the farm.