Orwell portrays his vision in animals that start a revolution against their owner. The two leaders decide on a government called "Animalism." They take over the farm after their owner forgets to feed them. They destroy all instruments that supported their suppression. They make up seven commandments for the animals to live by. They also forbid entering into the farmhouse and any contact with the humans. One of the leaders come up with the idea to build a windmill for electricity, but the other leader wants it to be his idea so he runs the other leader off. He tells the animals that the other leader was with the owner of the farm. As the animals work on the windmill they notice the decrease in their food supply. The leader tells the animals that they have to trade with the other farmers. This makes the animals very upset because that is breaking one of the commandments. The leader try's to rationalize it and change the commandments. One day the leader invites one of the Neighbor farms over for inspection. As they sit inside the farmhouse the animals could not distinguish between man and animal. The full symbolism of this book is wonderful. How he uses animals to depict his visions, and to show how easily a society can be taken over. Most of all it showed that in the end their own leader betrayed the animals. .
In Orwell's classic 1984, he decides to use real people to show his visions on our future. The main character of the story, Winston Smith feels frustrated by the oppression .
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and rigid control of the ruling Party of Oceania, which prohibits free thought, sex and many other signs of individualism. They were ruled by a figure called Big Brother. Winston and the other people of Oceania did not have any privacy because of the telescreens in each persons home. It showed propaganda and political pamphlets, which had cameras and microphones built in so the party could spy on the people.