Typically satirical.
Animal Farm, for example, was a satire about Russia in World War II.
The story is literally about some animals on a farm who overthrow the farmer's rule, but then the pigs begin to rise to power and the cycle of tyranny starts all over again.
All I could find was this:After seeing a young boy whipping a carthorse, Orwell had the idea to make his story A FABLE.I GOT THIS FROM http://www.shmoop.com/animal-farm/4TH STANZA (PARAGRAPH) DOWN 1ST SENTENCE!
George Orwell wrote 1984 to warn people about the dangers of totalitarianism and the loss of individual freedom in a society controlled by a powerful government.
1984
'Nineteen Eighty-Four'
Down and Out in Paris and London was Orwell's first written and published novel in 1933.
yes he did, he also wrote 1984
Orwell´s essay on Kipling was first published in 1942.
George Orwell was inspired to write "Animal Farm" by his observations of the Russian Revolution and the rise of Stalinism in the Soviet Union. The story is an allegorical critique of totalitarianism and political corruption, using animals on a farm to represent different aspects of society and government. Orwell aimed to highlight the dangers of political power and the manipulation of language for propaganda purposes.
1940s He wrote it in 1948, published in 1949
Hope for rebellion resides in the proles
George Orwell wrote Animal Farm as a satirical allegory to criticize the Soviet Union under Stalin's rule and to highlight the dangers of totalitarianism and corruption in society.
Orwell wrote dystopian fiction, for example; Animal Farm and Nineteen Eighty Four