Allegory as a Literary Device in George Orwell’s Animal Farm (1945)
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Faculty of Letters and Foreign Languages Department of English
Abstract
The power of allegory lies in its flexibility. This device can simplify what is complex and
present it in a simple comprehensible way. It has been used by writers and poets since
antiquity and it is still being implied by modern writers. George Orwell’s Animal farm (1945)
is a political allegory; it symbolizes the Bolshevik revolution that has occurred in Russia in
1917. The Bolsheviks were communists who rebelled to overthrow the Russian emperor Czar
Nicholas II. The revolution ended with success, however, the power-hungry leaders lead to
the corruption of Russia, and it became worse than it has ever been in Czar’s days. Russia is
represented by the farm in the novel, while the abusive leaders are symbolized by the pigs.
Allegory has the power of both a metaphor and a narrative. It is implied by political writers
either to openly satirize a situation or to add a mysterious touch to their works; by embodying
their political opinion inconspicuously in an allegorical works
