No, there are classes and elites. The pigs being the most regarded and she sheep as the commoners, or the chickens as workers.
In the beginning, the animals seek to make it a classless society with the set of rules that Snowball and Napoleon make. In the end, it is not, with the pigs the ruling class and the rest of the animals workers.
A classless stateless society is Socialism.
The animals in "Animal Farm" represent different groups of people and political ideologies in society.
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Benjamin the donkey in Animal Farm represents the cynical and skeptical individuals in society who are aware of the corruption and manipulation around them but choose not to take action.
CLASSLESS
In short, no. Classless society, in it's ultimate version would mean no divisions on the basis of economic status, which certainly wasn't the case in the USSR.
The concept of a classless society is most closely associated with communism, where there is no private ownership of the means of production and everyone is considered equal.
Benjamin in Animal Farm represents the cynical and skeptical individuals in society who are aware of the corruption and manipulation of those in power, but choose not to take action to change the system.
The name of the animal farm is Manor Farm. Once the revolution started, the animals changed it to, in fact, Animal Farm. As it progresses to the end of the book, the pigs change it back to Manor Farm. It's really ironic if you read it.
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.
The pigs, particularly Snowball and Napoleon, taught the other animals to read and write in "Animal Farm" by George Orwell. They believed that education was essential in achieving their goal of a successful animal-led society.