How does Napoleon’s questioning of the pigs demonstrate the author’s purpose of reflecting reality? It shows similarities with Stalin's Great Purge and reveals how dictators use fear to control people. It shows how some animals are capable of using nonviolent tactics to gain power over others. It shows how leaders blame others for the problems of the society they lead and punish them accordingly. It shows how both Napoleon and Stalin used promises of a better life to take control of a group.
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The correct answer is: " It shows similarities with Stalin's Great Purge and reveals how dictators use fear to control people"
Napoleon would make no sense unless we know that it is the mimesis of Joseph Stalin, who was General Secretary of the Communist Party from 1922 until his death, thirty years later. Like Napoleon, Stalin was a master driving the ropes behind the scenes. He formed a secret police, the NKVD (later the KGB), which behaved like the dogs of Napoleon, who ultimately prove their effectiveness by killing Leon Trotsky, represented in Snowball, and one of Stalin's greatest rivals.
At the same time, Stalin maintained control over the media, ordering propaganda from himself in which the children look at him with adoration. He used his political power basically to rewrite Russian history, giving himself a much more important role in the 1917 Revolution than he really was, apart from self-designing himself and no one but himself, the responsibility for the victory of the Second World War. And look at this: Nikita Khrushchev, who was under Stalin's command and was the next Russian leader, remembered how, while Stalin became a giant of Russian history, he really wanted to be remembered for his modesty. Ha! Clear!
Just as Stalin uses the secret police to cling to power, Napoleon uses his dogs' attack to get rid of opposition to force, in the same way that he silences dissent and creates his own image through Squealer and his sheep One of the greatest parallels between Napoleon and Stalin has to do with the way the production in the Animal Farm plummets while Napoleon is in charge. He decides to fill the barns with sand to hide the poor harvest. This episode is an allusion of how Stalin dismantled agricultural production with his Five Year Plans (which began in 1928). When the plans resulted in a huge famine across Russia, Stalin did everything he could to hide it and show that Russia was doing better than before (visit our section on "Symbolism, imagery and allegories" for more details about the Plans Five-year.
Napoleon would make no sense unless we know that it is the mimesis of Joseph Stalin, who was General Secretary of the Communist Party from 1922 until his death, thirty years later. Like Napoleon, Stalin was a master driving the ropes behind the scenes. He formed a secret police, the NKVD (later the KGB), which behaved like the dogs of Napoleon, who ultimately prove their effectiveness by killing Leon Trotsky, represented in Snowball, and one of Stalin's greatest rivals.
At the same time, Stalin maintained control over the media, ordering propaganda from himself in which the children look at him with adoration. He used his political power basically to rewrite Russian history, giving himself a much more important role in the 1917 Revolution than he really was, apart from self-designing himself and no one but himself, the responsibility for the victory of the Second World War. And look at this: Nikita Khrushchev, who was under Stalin's command and was the next Russian leader, remembered how, while Stalin became a giant of Russian history, he really wanted to be remembered for his modesty. Ha! Clear!
Just as Stalin uses the secret police to cling to power, Napoleon uses his dogs' attack to get rid of opposition to force, in the same way that he silences dissent and creates his own image through Squealer and his sheep One of the greatest parallels between Napoleon and Stalin has to do with the way the production in the Animal Farm plummets while Napoleon is in charge. He decides to fill the barns with sand to hide the poor harvest. This episode is an allusion of how Stalin dismantled agricultural production with his Five Year Plans (which began in 1928). When the plans resulted in a huge famine across Russia, Stalin did everything he could to hide it and show that Russia was doing better than before (visit our section on "Symbolism, imagery and allegories" for more details about the Plans Five-year.
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Answer: It shows similarities with Stalin's Great Purge and reveals how dictators use fear to control people.
The novel ‘Animal Farm’ by George Orwells is a metaphoric take on the reign of dictators in the world.
The character of Napoleon has shades of several dictators who had terrorized the world.
The scene where Napoleon carries out purges to find out those who support Snowball, an outcast boar, is along the lines of Stalin’s purges in Soviet Union against the Trotsky supporters.
Both the fictional and non-fictional purges are examples of how leaders abused their power to induce fear among their citizens in order to control them.
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