English, asked by zeppelin, 12 hours ago

WHAT DOES EACH CHARACTER IN ANIMAL FARM REPRESENT?

(Although I know what kind of answers to expect from here, atleast there will be SOMEONE who can provide a non-copied answer!)​

Answers

Answered by arnav5941
1
Pigs:

Old Major: The original revolutionary who dies before things begin to happen - Karl Marx and V.I. Lenin
Napoleon: Ambitious, silent, intimidating and power-hungry Berkshire boar - Josif Stalin.
Snowball: A white boar, intelligent, loquacious and good organizer - Leon Trotsky
Squealer: A fat porker, Napoleon’s right trotter man - Vyacheslav Molotov
Pinkeye: Napoleon’s food taster. The Communist officials
Minimus – A poetic pig who makes a new anthem for the Animal Farm once Beasts of England has been banned. The Communist artists.
Four young pigs - Zinovyev, Bukharin, Kameneyev, Sokolnikov - the other Communist leaders who get purged by Napoleon (Stalin).
Equines:

Boxer: Hard-working but somewhat dim and fiercely loyal stallion - the Soviet kolkhozniks. Gets betrayed by pigs and sent to knackers when he had outlived his usefulness.
Clover: Equally hard-working mare, similar in character - the Soviet country women. Still alive at the end of the book.
Mollie A spoiled young draught mare, fancies sugar and ribbons. She detests the new regime and runs away, and becomes a cart horse. The old Russian professional middle class.
Benjamin: An apolitical donkey. Intelligent as any pig and extremely wise, but cynical as heck. The author avatar. Also the Russian Jews.
Carnivores:

Jessie and Bluebell: The Okhranka, Czar’s secret police. Their pups are seized by Napoleon
The pups: GPU, the Communist secret police. Napoleon uses them to terrorize the Animal Farm and upkeep his own power.
The cat: Cossacks and the old criminal police. Utterly apolitical, loyal only to the Animal Farm but to no human or porcine ruler, loves freedom, wants to only catch criminals (rats and other vermin) and do intelligence and espionage, but shuns menial work. Flees away when things go sour.
The avians:

The chickens - Ukrainians. Are ruthlessly purged by the dogs.
The geese - new intellectuals. The gander commits suicide lest he is killed.
The cockerel - Pravda newspaper
Moses the Raven - The Orthodox Church. Initially driven away by the pigs, later tolerated by Napoleon
The ruminants:

The cows - Soviet industrial proletariat
The sheep - Soviet town and city populace. Too weak and not intelligent enough to oppose the pigs
Muriel the goat: The samizdat, the urban dissidents. Clever enough to keep low profile.
The humans:

Mr Jones - lazy, lax alcoholic who neglects the farm. Czar Nicholas II
Frederick - sly and shrewd farmer who is in cahoots with the pigs. Adolf Hitler
Mr Pilkington - the master of the neighbouring farm. The Western democracies. (Pilkington is a major glassmaker corporation in the real life, so here an allusion to “transparency”)
Mr Whymper - the lawyer and the middleman of the Animal Farm and a contact on humans. The foreign Communists
Answered by rinkey2006bkp
1

Answer:

Manor Farm is allegorical of Russia, and the farmer Mr. Jones is the Russian Czar. Old Majoranr stands for either Karl Marx or Vladimir Lenin, and the pig named Snowball represents the intellectual revolutionary Leon Trotsky. Napoleon stands for Stalin, while the dogs are his secret police

Explanation:

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