George Orwell ResearchEric Arthur Blair was born in 1903 at Motihari in British-occupied India

George Orwell Research Eric Arthur Blair was born in 1903 at Motihari in British-occupied India. While growin up, he attended private schools in Sussex, Wellington and Eton. He worked at the Imperial Indian Police untill 1927 when he went to London to study the poverty stricken. He then moved to Paris where he wrote two lost novels. After he moved back to England he wrote Down and Out in Paris and London, Burmese Days, A Clergyman's Daughter and Keep the Apidistra Flying. He published all four under the psuedonym George Orwell. He then married Eileen O'Shaughnessy and wrote The Road to Wigan Pier. Orwell then joined the Army and fought in the Spanish civil war. He became a socialist revolutionary and wrote Homage to Catalonia, Coming Up for Air, and in 1943, he wrote Animal Farm. It's success ended Orwell's financial troubles forever. In 1947 and 48 despite Tuberculosis, he wrote Nineteen Eighty-Four. He died in 1950 (Williams 7-15). This essay will show and prove to you that George Orwell's life has influenced modern society a great deal. BIOGRAPHY In 1903, Eric Arthur Blair was born. Living in India until he was four, Blair and his family then moved to England and settled at Henley. At the age of eight, Blair was sent to a private school in Sussex, and he lived there, except on holidays, until he was thirteen. He went to two private secondary schools: Wellington(for one

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George Orwell's Animal Farm

George Orwell's Animal Farm, the classic satire of the Russian Revolution, protests the brutality of totalitarianism. Animal Farm is a story about farm animals that revolt against their human masters in order to create an ideal society based on the principle that all animals are created equal. Like many revolutions in modern society, the animals' success is ephemeral; a new totalitarian regime soon takes power and assumes the place of the humans. Orwell exposes what really happens to the victims of failed revolutions and why these revolutions cannot succeed. He targets the methods dictators use to obtain and hold power, the gradual corruption of government, and the ignorance of people who allow these dictators to take control. Orwell describes the cruel, iniquitous, and greedy techniques dictators use to obtain and hold power. For example, he writes, "Suddenly the dogs sitting around Napoleon let out deep, menacing growls, and the pigs fell silent and sat down again," to demonstrate that Napoleon uses fear of his dogs to keep the animals under control. The dogs signify Stalin's KGB secret police, which he used to hunt down his enemies and make people fear him. Orwell ridicules the use of fear because it is an evil tool that dictators use to extort their people. Another example is how Squealer makes the animals believe that they have better lives, Napoleon helps them,

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Animal Farm Bookreport - plot outline and its links to the Russian Revolution.

Animal farm door George Orwell Summary This is a story based on the Russian Revolution, the characters are different and it is written in another time, but there are many parallels between them. Mr. Jones is the farmer on Manor Farm, he is not a very good farmer and he is mistreating his animals. Mr. Jones is drunk all the time and the animals are not being treated well. Major, an old, wise boar, is telling the other animals on Manor Farm about a rebellion, which will happen some day. All the animals are listening carefully to Major when he tells them about 'animalism', a society where every animal is equal and Major teaches the other animals a song called 'The Beasts of England', which is about England ruled by animals. A few days later Major dies in his sleep and the pigs, who are the smartest animals on the farm, are preparing the other animals for the big day of the rebellion. One day Mr. Jones had been out all day and forgot to feed the animals, this was what they had been waiting for and they took over the farm from Mr. Jones. The animals renamed the farm into 'Animal Farm'. The pigs Snowball and Napoleon found themselves the best leaders so they took charge of everything. They forced every animal to work and they instructed the animals in the Seven Commandments of 'animalism'. But the pigs took advantage of their positions and they immediately took the milk that the

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Critical Evaluation of Animal Farm - Write about a novel which has an interesting storyline but also manages to convey a serious theme.

Critical Evaluation of Animal Farm Write about a novel which has an interesting storyline but also manages to convey a serious theme. Explain briefly what happens in the novel, what makes the plot interesting and then explain the theme. Discuss the techniques used by the author to convey a theme including characterisation, setting and style of writing. Extract from a song taken up by the Animals of Animal Farm. Beasts of England, beasts of Ireland, Beasts of every land and clime, Hearken to my joyful tidings, Of the golden future time. Soon or late the day is coming, Tyrant Man shall be o'erthrown, And the fruitful fields of England, Shall be trod by beasts alone. Rings shall vanish from our noses, And the harness from our back, Bit and spur shall rust forever, Cruel whips no more shall crack. For that day we all must labour, Though we die before it breaks; Cows and horses, geese and turkeys. All must toil for freedoms sake. Beasts of England, beasts of Ireland, Hearken to my joyful tidings. Animal Farm has seen a revolution. The animals have overthrown their evil master Mr. Jones and set out to make the perfect farm. To do this they draw up seven rules, these commandments they hope will guide them to the perfect life. The Seven Commandments: . Whatever goes upon two legs is an enemy. 2. Whatever goes upon four legs, or has wings, is a friend 3. No

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Descriptive Story.

Jenny Harris English Language - Course Work Descriptive Story Due 11-10-03 It was an extremely hot summer's day. Not a single cloud was to be found defiling a perfect blue sky. The birds chirped blissfully, their songs penetrating the still silence of the park; they danced through the sky their bright colours entwining with one another to create a most spectacular display. Green grass stretched out for miles, effortlessly swaying in the light breeze. Majestic trees loomed above, with their long branches stretching through the sky; their dominance was unmistakable. Multicoloured flowers decorated the landscape, their heavenly sent floated on the breeze completing the flawless scene. All of a sudden the tranquillity vanished. The bird's sweet singing changed into awkward squawking and quickly they dispersed. The trees looked on with repulsion as the large hairy creature bounded gleefully through the fields. A large black nose was plunged into the grass repeatedly, sniffing and snorting; he spewed snot everywhere and even the flowers curled up in disgust. His enormous paws crushed everything unfortunate enough to have been beneath him. The animal paused for a second, then with sudden burst of energy began to recklessly scoop up the grass, he stuffed in mouthfuls without any further hesitation. After a short time the animal seemed to lose his enthusiasm, he lowered his head

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Animal Farm - Give a detailed account of the two attempts to build the windmill and explain why each attempt ends in disaster.

Q2. Give a detailed account of the two attempts to build the windmill and explain why each attempt ends in disaster. Snowball first brought up the idea of building the windmill after seeing that winter was hard to pass due to the frozen fields that are barren, and the bitter cold that the animals suffered. The windmill, according to Snowball, will be made to operate a dynamo which will in turn supply the farm with electricity. Electricity will light the stalls and warm them in winter, and would also run a circular saw, a chaff-cutter, a mangel-slicer and an electric milking machine. This will be for industrial development. Snowball also conjured up a picture of fantastic machines which would do their work for the animals while the animals will graze at their ease in the fields or improved their minds with reading and conversation. Napoleon, who had vehemently opposed the windmill idea from the start, then made a sudden U-turn to support it, claiming it his own, after expelling Snowball. He stated that it would mean very hard work and necessitated reducing their rations. Indeed, the hard work started soon after the announcement. During the whole of spring and summer the animals worked a sixty-hour week, and in August Napoleon announced that there would be work on Sunday afternoons as well. This work was strictly voluntary, except that any animal that absented itself would

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The Rain Horse-Diary Extract.

The Rain Horse-Diary Extract Dear Diary 20th September 1983 Last week was the most evil week in my entire life. I returned home to my countryside village after 12 years of fighting as a boxer in south London. I'm proud of my self after I achieved the heavyweight title. It was just an amazing thing to happen. As I arrived, I went out for a walk around the farm and I noticed a different atmosphere. It was very boring, uninspiring and lifeless. There wasn't a current of air. It was an alien land and like I left it twelve hundred years ago not just twelve years ago. I wanted to see the sunshine and feel the hot weather that reminded me of my childhood but the land was dull, wet and cold. I wanted to leave as quickly as possible. So I kept walking and suddenly something moved in the corner of my eye. There was a strange looking horse on top of the hill. I was very annoyed and irritated because of the rain and mud splashing on my trousers. I felt sick and disgusted at that moment. I looked over my right side and I saw a thin black horse running across the ploughed field towards the hill, its head down, neck stretched out. It didn't look to me like a normal horse, and it seemed to be staring at me. It wasn't like the pony we had when I was young. This horse seemed to have gone astray, and to be behaving strangely. I walked a few

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Animal Farm character assessment - Boxer.

Orwell first introduces Boxer in Chapter 1, when the animals are all coming in to hear Old Major's speech. Orwell describes Boxer with a strong appearance "Boxer was an enormous beast, nearly eighteen hands high", Boxer is also known for the amount of strength he has as he is "as strong as any two ordinary horses put together". But, even if his physical appearance might be extremely good, we cannot say the same about his mental capabilities because he was "not of first-rate intelligence". Even if it is the first time we have been introduced to Boxer, we can already see his kindness, "walking very slowly and setting down their vast hoofs with great care lest there should be some small animal concealed in the straw." Later on in Old Major's speech he tells Boxer "the very day those great muscles of yours lose their power, Jones will send you to the knackers", this is ironic because later on in the novel, when he does lose that power the pigs do exactly what Jones would have done - send him to the knackers. In the second chapter Orwell starts to show Boxer's natural loyalty to his leader, "Their most faithful disciples were the two cart-horses, Boxer and Clover". "Once having accepted the pigs as their teachers they absorbed everything that they were told." In just two pages ahead again it shows his loyalty to the pigs, "When Boxer heard this he fetched the small straw hat

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The Truth behind Animal Rights and Wrongs- Derived from balanced and biased texts.

The Truth behind Animal Rights and Wrongs- Derived from balanced and biased texts. One of the most controversial cruelty issues concerns the future of research and healthcare centred on animal testing. Debates concentrate on whether we should stop animal testing or not. On one hand, coversationists argue that animal research and testing is crucial for our futures healthcare and that what they do can only be through animals. On the other hand, it is argued that like humans; animals have feelings and they don't deserve to be testes on. The two extracts 'Animal Rights and Wrongs' published by the Guardian, and 'Animal Experiments are Bad Science' published by Animal Aid, are both giving us some light on animal testing. Similar topics they may be, one Animal Rights and wrongs' is balanced and gives two perspectives, why testing is good and bad. The Animal Aid leaflet is biased, its only there to persuade us to stop testing, by looking at its every negative points. Rarely does it mention the benefits, when it does it is followed by criticism. By looking at the sub-headings you can clarify the above. 'Animal Rights and Wrongs' is what we call a formal piece of text. The writer is like an encyclopaedia, no feelings, no opinions, only the facts. The opinions that are included, are those made by us, the people, what the public has to say. The Animal Aid leaflet, if you read it you

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Should Scientific Experiments On Animals Be Allowed?

PATRICK CHRISTIE FOUNDATION ARTS OCTOBER ASSIGNMENT 2001 SHOULD SCIENTIFIC EXPERIMENTS ON ANIMALS BE ALLOWED? Anti-vivisectionists would have us believe that medical research laboratories resemble the freak factory depicted in H.G. Wells' Island of Doctor Moreau, yet scientists would have us believe that they are humanities' last, best hope for medical salvation. Who do we believe and more importantly who should we believe? It is an area of debate fraught with claim and counter claim. Some of the many claims of abolitionist groups are that animal biology and disease bear no relation to their human counterparts, animal research and testing has not resulted in any medical advances, the experiments are cruel to the animals and that there are no regulations to safeguard the animal's welfare. Most people are of the view that animals hold no place in the search for medical cures for humans, as animals are quite plainly different. Therefore, the argument goes, animals have different illnesses and diseases from people and different reactions to the drugs being designed for human use. All mammals, however, have the same organs performing the same functions but with minor differences. It is these small differences, which point the way for scientists trying to find a treatment or cure for an illness. Diseases such as cancer, asthma and heart failure are just some of the ailments

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